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A Different Day: African American Struggles for Justice in Rural Louisiana, 1900-1970.


By Greta de Jong (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2002, xvi plus 316 pp.).

The rise of civil right demands in the the first half of the twentieth century and the consolidation during the 1950s and 1960s of a political civil rights civil rights n. those rights guaranteed by the Bill of Rights, the 13th and 14th Amendments to the Constitution, including the right to due process, equal treatment under the law of all people regarding enjoyment of life, liberty, property, and protection. Positive civil rights include the right to vote, the opportunity to enjoy the benefits of a democratic society, such as equal access to public schools, recreation, transportation, public facilities, and movement represent one of the major historical transformation affecting American society. In this reviewer's opinion, dais often lively and quite detailed book provides a fascinating account of the civil right movement in local rural in Louisiana and those who made it. In the process, de Jong's broad and sensitive book reinstates the study of civil tights as a highly worthwhile endeavor.

The thesis is straighforward and succinctly summarized by the author as she demonstrates through a close look at CORE's activities in nine Louisiana rural parishes, how the civil right movement and strategy differed largely in rural communities as compared to urban settings. Despite its limited parameters and highly focused reseach design, it stands out as providing a persuasive account of the strengths and weakenessses of the civil rights movement. The book displays an impressive range of research and an admirable willingness to move beyond narrow civil rights history to provide the reader with a more comprehensive view.

De Jong starts her study with an examination of the oppressive charater of Jim Crow and the degrading consequence it had on African American activism. Besides providing a good description of African American life under Jim Crow, she emphasizes the importance of the informal strategy of resistance developped by African Americans in response to white supremacist violence. As a result, the particularly strong qualities of the de Jong history are its broad, systematic and evenhanded coverage of such standard subjects as the segregation laws, disfranchisment and limited economic opportunies offered to African Americans. By her analysis of the involvement of white elites and officials in violence and lynchings and their determination to limit education for African Americans, she clearly describes the mechanism by which a labor system close to slavery persisted in Louisina until 1940.

De Jong persuasively shows how rural African American people developed by the turn of the century a variety of strategies in order to circumvent plantation owners' efforts to deny them knowledge and power. African Americans in rural Louisiana found in blues, churches and joke joints a respite from the harsh realities of plantation life. De Jong vigorously argues that, despite the importance of their role in community and political life, churches and fraternal societies were not strong enough to overcome white racism since general poverty and powerlessness generally prevailed during the Jim Crow period.

De Jong shares the conventional view that in rural Louisiana, as well as the urban south, World War I provided African Americans with an opportunity to challenge the repressive social system. As the Great Migration of 1916-19 affected African American communities in the south, a small number chose to organize themselves and openly challenge white society. On the other hand, de Jong also argues convincingly that the New Deal represents another important social upheaval: a period when African Americans joined radical workers and farmers' movements to fight to end forced labor and peonage peonage (pē`ənĭj), system of involuntary servitude based on the indebtedness of the laborer (the peon) to his creditor. It was prevalent in Spanish America, especially in Mexico, Guatemala, Ecuador, and Peru..

Although the intervention of the Federal authorities played a paramount role, de Jong convincingly argues that African Americans achieved most progress when they themselves took up the fight. During World War II, civil right leaders in rural Louisiana were quick to point out the contradiction between the fight for democarcy overseas and the segregation, disfranchisement and violence they suffered at home. In this way, they were able to rapidly obtain the prohibtion of discrimination in the Selective Service selective service, in U.S. history, term for conscription.

Conscription was established (1863) in the U.S. Civil War, but proved unpopular (see draft riots). The law authorized release from service to anyone who furnished a substitute and, at first, to those who paid $300. General conscription was reintroduced in World War I with the Selective Service Act of 1917. All men from 21 to 30 years of age (later extended 18 to 45), inclusive, had to register.
 Act. As national politics came to to favor African Americans' strength for emancipation, the latter were better placed than ever before to intiate organized, sustained attacks on white supremacy.

The most original and important sections of de Jong book deal with the period after 1940. Supported and encouraged by the Federal government, inspired by civil rights leaders and stimulated by their economic upward mobility, African Americans launched the strongest attack so far against white supremacy. The GI Bill and other federal programs had a profound effect along with the rise of a new African American middle class in launching a powerful attack against discrimination in voting registration, segregation and inadequate education.

De Jong shows that the economic transformation of the south after World War II, heralded by the mechanization of the agriculture and the movement of manufacturing into rural areas, led to increased wages and a rise in African Americans' living standards, despite white resistance and conitnued discrimination. These underlying economic processes had a strong influence on the freedom struggle.

In her analysis of the role of CORE, de Jong demonstrates that not all African Americans shared the CORE ideals about the best way to overcome white supremacists. In the process, the book includes a modest effort to analyse the social composition of the civil rights movment at the local level in Louisiana. One of de Jong's particularly interesting findings is the fact that the civil rights movement drew relatively more of its activists from among landowners than from among professionals such as teachers and ministers. The latter were reluctant to become involved since teachers were afraid of losing their jobs and ministers feared that their churches could fall prey to arson.

De Jong's book not only offers a fresh look and adds new dimensions to the appreciation of the history of civil right movement, but it also makes an important statement about the nature of the American south and how the south came to grips with its demons. While political participation for African Americans and the end of the use of violence as a systematic means of repression stand out as the main achievements of the civil rights movement, de Jong notes that the fight for equal education was only partly achieved and persistent poverty still represents an obstacle to progress. In particular she points out that the swing towards a conservative domination over national politics led to a backlash against the ideas of the civil rights movmeent during the 1970s. Despite these reverses, she argues that the movement had deep consequences which profoundly affected the condition of African Americans in the south.

Giles Vandal

University de Sherbrooke
COPYRIGHT 2003 Journal of Social History
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Vandal, Giles
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Dec 22, 2003
Words:1042
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