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Opposing Jim Crow African Americans And The Soviet Indictment Of Us Racism 19281937 Meredith L Roman

  • SKU: BELL-7141794
Opposing Jim Crow African Americans And The Soviet Indictment Of Us Racism 19281937 Meredith L Roman
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Opposing Jim Crow African Americans And The Soviet Indictment Of Us Racism 19281937 Meredith L Roman instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 9.87 MB
Pages: 319
Author: Meredith L. Roman
ISBN: 9780803240841, 0803240848
Language: English
Year: 2012

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Opposing Jim Crow African Americans And The Soviet Indictment Of Us Racism 19281937 Meredith L Roman by Meredith L. Roman 9780803240841, 0803240848 instant download after payment.

Before the Nazis came to power in Germany, Soviet officials labeled the United States the most racist country in the world. Photographs, children’s stories, films, newspaper articles, political education campaigns, and court proceedings exposed the hypocrisy of America’s racial democracy. In contrast, the Soviets represented the USSR itself as a superior society where racism was absent and identified African Americans as valued allies in resisting an imminent imperialist war against the first workers’ state.
Meredith L. Roman’s Opposing Jim Crow examines the period between 1928 and 1937, when the promotion of antiracism by party and trade union officials in Moscow became a priority policy. Soviet leaders stood to gain considerable propagandistic value at home and abroad by drawing attention to U.S. racism, their actions simultaneously directed attention to the routine violation of human rights that African Americans suffered as citizens of the United States. Soviet policy also challenged the prevailing white supremacist notion that blacks were biologically inferior and thus unworthy of equality with whites. African Americans of various political and socioeconomic backgrounds became indispensable contributors to Soviet antiracism and helped officials in Moscow challenge the United States’ claim to be the world’s beacon of democracy and freedom.
Meredith L. Roman is an assistant professor of history at SUNY–Brockport. Her articles have appeared in the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, International Labor and Working-Class History, Race & Class, and Critique: A Journal of Socialist Theory.

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