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Blood In Their Eyes The Elaine Race Massacres Of 1919 Grif Stockley

  • SKU: BELL-10421536
Blood In Their Eyes The Elaine Race Massacres Of 1919 Grif Stockley
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Blood In Their Eyes The Elaine Race Massacres Of 1919 Grif Stockley instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Arkansas Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.91 MB
Pages: 296
Author: Grif Stockley
ISBN: 9781610750745, 1610750748
Language: English
Year: 2004

Product desciption

Blood In Their Eyes The Elaine Race Massacres Of 1919 Grif Stockley by Grif Stockley 9781610750745, 1610750748 instant download after payment.

Winner of the 2002 Booker Worthen Literary Prize

American Association of State and Local History Award 2003

In late September 1919, black sharecroppers met to protest unfair settlements for their cotton crops from white plantation owners. Local law enforcement broke up the union's meeting, and the next day a thousand white men from the Delta—and troops of the U.S. Army itself—converged on Phillips County, Arkansas, to "put down" the black sharecroppers' "insurrection." In riveting, novelistic prose, writer and Delta native Grif Stockley considers the evidence and tells the full story of this incident for the first time, concluding that black people were murdered in Elaine by white mobs and federal soldiers. Five white men died as a result of the conflict; contemporary estimates of African American deaths ranged from 20 to an even more horrifying 856. White officials jailed hundreds of black workers, torturing some of them. Twelve black men were charged with first-degree murder. Their legal battles lasted six years, but national and local silence has persisted much longer.
Stockley takes on this silence and shows that it resulted from sustained official efforts to convince the public that only blacks who had resisted lawful authority were killed. He shows too that it is part of a larger silence in which the fear and terror that were the daily staples of the African American experience have been summed up all too easily in the term "Jim Crow" in a failure to fully confront the anguish of the period.

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