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The politics of whiteness : race, workers, and culture in the modern South / Michelle Brattain.

De Gruyter Princeton University Press eBook-Package Backlist 2000-2013 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Brattain, Michelle, 1968- author.
Series:
Politics and Society in Modern America
Politics and Society in Modern America ; v.143
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Labor--Southern States--History.
Labor.
African Americans--Employment--Southern States--History.
African Americans.
Labor movement--Southern States--History.
Labor movement.
Southern States--Race relations--History.
Southern States.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (318 pages)
Place of Publication:
Princeton, New Jersey ; Oxford : Princeton University Press, [2001]
Summary:
The Politics of Whiteness presents the first sustained analysis of white racial identity among workers in what was the South's largest industry--the textile industry--for much of the twentieth century. Grounding her work in a study of Rome, Georgia, and surrounding Floyd County from the Great Depression to the 1970s, Michelle Brattain paints a richly textured local portrait of how the varied social benefits of whiteness shaped the experience of textile millhands and, as a result, Southern politics. In doing so, she challenges traditional views of Southern politics as dominated by elites and marked by passivity among Southern workers. Brattain uncovers considerable white working-class political influence and activism for decades starting in the 1930s--which, by re-creating and defending Southern institutions grounded in the idea of racial difference, helped pave the way for resistance to the civil rights movement.Structured chronologically, this book revises the current understanding, in the Southern working-class context, of paternalism, the New Deal, the 1934 General Textile Strike, the Second World War, and the Fair Employment Practices Commission. It addresses the vast influence of Eugene Talmadge and his son in twentieth-century Georgia politics, and the emergence of Republican influence in the South. Finally there came the moment when formerly explicit defenses of white supremacy were transformed into an intangible, but still powerful, politics of whiteness. The Politics of Whiteness will interest anyone concerned with the history of American politics, the labor movement, or race in America.
Contents:
Frontmatter
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
Prologue: The Politics of Whiteness
One: Boosterism, Whiteness, and Paternalism in the New South: The Creation of Wage Work
Two: "Labor's Best Friend": Talmadge, Paternalism, and the 1934 Strike
Three: "So-Called Fair Employment": World War II and Whiteness
Four "Still a White Man's Georgia": PAC, Operation Dixie, and the Resurgence of Talmadgism
Five "Some Romans Have Red Faces' The 1948 Strikes
Six: Making Friends and Enemies: Political Action in Postwar Georgia
Seven: The "So-Called 'Civil Rights' Bill" and the Republicanization of Rome
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages [283]-293) and index.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9780691007311
0691007314
OCLC:
1264469796

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