Devourers of the Afro-American Light: Histories of "Place" via the Imposition of White Rage and Police Brutality in Detroit

被引:0
|
作者
Radney, El-Ra Adair [1 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Albany, Dept Africana Latin Amer Caribbean & Latinx Studie, 1400 Washington Ave,Hudson Bldg,Room 149, Albany, NY 12209 USA
关键词
Detroit; Black urban history; Afro-American; White rage; White riots; Ossian Sweet; 1943 Riot of Detroit; 1967 Riot of Detroit; Metropolitan color; DuBois-the Veil; The Great Civil Rights Case of Michigan; African-American struggle; Great Migration; Racial violence;
D O I
10.1007/s12111-024-09672-7
中图分类号
C95 [民族学、文化人类学];
学科分类号
0304 ; 030401 ;
摘要
This historical analysis contends that the shaping of Detroit and its enduring racial character have been informed and influenced by two pivotal currents: its history of violent racial struggle (White rage) and police brutality and their imposition of subordinating place for Afro-Americans within Detroit's metropolitan color line. The current survey looks at three significant intervals: The Ossian Sweet Case and Race Riot of 1925, the 1943 Race Riot, and the 1967 "Rebellion." These decades provide a vivid story-catching that follows the racial foundations "set in stone" by the Blackburn Riot of 1833, by which we can begin to understand the patterns of White status threat and the counter-response of Black resistance with its attendant quest for universal freedom and egalitarian aspirations (Barton, (2010). Setting the record straight: American history in Black & White. WallBuilder Press; Walton et al., (2017). American politics and the African-American quest for universal freedom. Routledge.). In contrast to the narrative of "the arsenal of democracy," racial antagonism by many Whites lurked at the heart of social upheavals within Detroit's battleground of race and class from the 1920s to the 1960s.
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页码:298 / 314
页数:17
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