Emancipation Betrayed: The Hidden History of Black Organizing and White Violence in Florida from Reconstruction to the Bloody Election of 192

(Author)
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Product Details
Price
$35.94
Publisher
University of California Press
Publish Date
Pages
430
Dimensions
6.0 X 8.8 X 1.1 inches | 1.4 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780520250031

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About the Author
Paul Ortiz is Director of the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program and Associate Professor of History at the University of Florida and the coeditor of Remembering Jim Crow: African Americans Tell about Life in the Segregated South (2001).
Reviews
"Historians rarely claim that a movement began at a specific point, because they know there are always antecedents. Ortiz understands that the national Civil Rights Movement of the 1940s and 1950s had its origins in local movements, such as the ones he traces in Florida from the 1860s through 1920. Beginning with the Civil War and its aftermath, Ortiz argues that African Americans, from the start of their freedom, demanded and used their civil rights. They did not acquiesce to segregation laws; rather, they fought the laws at every opportunity. It was by surviving segregation that blacks gained their strength, developed their leadership, and created the organizations that coalesced in a voter registration drive in 1919 for the 1920 election. Despite physical violence, blacks voted in significant numbers. This is a compelling tale, one that helps to adjust the view that blacks were powerless in the 50 years after Reconstruction ended. . . . Very useful for graduate students and researchers. Recommended. "-- "CHOICE"
"This study is a welcome addition to the growing body of scholarly literature on how African Americas in Florida and the South sought to expand the meaning of freedom in the years between the end of the Civil War and the end of World War I. Ortiz has written a superb book with depth and suggestiveness."-- "Ethnic and Racial Studies"
"Paul Ortiz's excellent study . . . contributes significantly to the historiography of Reconstruction and its aftermath. Unlike most reconstruction era scholars, Ortiz carries his research into the early decades of the twentieth century and shows a long tradition of racial activism and armed resistance by African Americans to secure their civil rights and to protect their lives. . . . Through an impressive array of primary sources such as newspapers, oral interviews, federal and state documents, and manuscript collections, including the papers of the NAACP, [Ortiz] has done far more than simply write a history of African American victimization. . . . [and] has also demonstrated convincingly that there was much greater continuity in the black freedom struggle in the South than historians had heretofore believed."-- "American Studies"
"Ortiz joins scholars such as Glenda Gilmore and Charles Payne in revealing the dimensions of communal and cooperative black efforts to create democracy in America. Recommended for collections on African American, local, and U.S. political history."-- "Library Journal"
"A successful work that highlights the struggle of black Floridians for civil rights."-- "H-Net"
"Ortiz has uncovered a largely forgotten history of brutal white repression and significant strains of black political activism, which he conveys in a powerful and often moving narrative."-- "Journal of American History"
"Paul Ortiz tells the compelling and timely story of African Americans' struggle for political rights, equal treatment, and human dignity in Florida from the end of the Civil War to the 1920 presidential election. Noting that scholars rarely treat Florida as part of the slave or segregated South, Ortiz describes the state as one of the success stories of the New South, with a thriving white tourist industry built on exploited black labor."-- "Journal of American Ethnic History"
"Paul Ortiz offers a fascinating and contemporary paradigm that will no doubt force historians to understand again why African American life in Florida was so important."-- "Florida Historical Quarterly"
"This monograph will long be accepted as the definitive study of the Afro-American fight for equality between 1860 and 1920 in Florida and will be of much value for readers concerned with Civil Rights history in general."-- "Journal of Social History"
"Ortiz reveals the importance of indigenous people in developing a creative, self confident, and determined activist base upon which the civil rights movement could build."-- "Journal of Southern History"
"Emancipation Betrayed is essential reading for scholars seeking to understand the nature of social protest by African Americans and other groups."-- "Social History"
"A valuable contribution to American history and black studies."-- "Cercles"