Lexington Books
Pages: 364
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-7992-5 • Hardback • December 2016 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-1-4985-4969-1 • Paperback • November 2018 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
978-0-7391-7993-2 • eBook • December 2016 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
Russell Brooker is professor of political science at Alverno College.
Introduction: People of Good Will
Chapter 1Reconstruction: 1865–1877
Chapter 2Redemption: 1877–1892
Chapter 3Reconciliation: 1889–1908
Chapter 4Resistance: 1890–1908
Chapter 5Reality: Jim Crow During the Nadir, 1900–1917
Chapter 6Organization: 1909–1930
Chapter 7The Depression and the New Deal: 1930–1940
Chapter 8World War II and the 1940s
Chapter 9The United States in 1950
Chapter 10Epilogue: The United States Today
About the Author
For decades, historians of the civil rights movement have pushed the origins of the struggle for racial justice to well before the Brown decision of 1954. Brooker (political science, Alverno College) argues that the beginnings of activism began shortly after the end of Reconstruction, when the US government failed to uphold the 14th and 15th amendments for black Americans. For Brooker, the key to this activism was the decision of people of good will, black and white, to make the reality conform to the promise of the US. A decade before the creation of the NAACP, there had been attempts to organize resistance from oppression, including a moment when poor white and black southern farmers worked together to overcome their shared exploitation by rich white landowners. Although this effort failed, the experience provided some evidence that organizing at the community level, using litigation, and pressuring the federal government might produce a more equitable society. Brooker notes that the real agents of change were the victims of oppression, black Americans. As a work of synthesis, the book provides a timely introduction to what happens when people of good will act upon their conscience. Summing Up: Recommended. All academic levels/libraries.
— Choice Reviews
. . . Booker has produced a clearly narrated overview of the black freedom struggle that could serve as a useful course survey text.
— Journal of Southern History
Russell Brooker’s book is an important work of scholarship that uncovers the broad range of blacks and whites—“people of good will”—who worked to advance the cause of justice before and during the Civil Rights era. In considering the complicated ways white “people of good will” contributed to the advancement of African American interests, Brooker puts forth a much more complicated narrative of protest, accommodation, and advancement that carries a powerful echo even through today.
— Kimberley Johnson, Barnard College
Brooker succinctly traces the long arc of the civil rights movement from Reconstruction through World War II. The people of good will he profiles had many different motives to support the movement, but as Brooker persuasively explains, at key points they assisted the ongoing efforts of African Americans to secure equality, security, and opportunity.
— David Krugler, University of Wisconsin, Platteville
A solid synthesis. Brooker has produced a clearly written and useful narrative about racial politics in the under-appreciated years before the “modern” civil rights movement. The book raises important questions about when and by whom changes were made in the American projects of white supremacy and racial equality.
— Eric S. Yellin, University of Richmond