Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II
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The American Gulag
The comparison between the American and Russian use of forced labor for social control and development in a "backward" economy is obvious, and was so even in the 19th century with the publication of J. C. Powell's "The American Siberia" in 1891, detailing prisoner exploitation in Florida's convict lease system. Author Blackmon has collected and collated such widely-scattered documentation of this era into a comprehensive treatment. In doing so he has not exactly broken new ground, but has opened a half-shut door for a new generation of readers.
Mr. Blackmon focuses on race as the decisive factor in retaining forced labor in America, and so it was in the South. As one reviewer has stated, however, poor Southern whites could be caught up in this system, especially in the border South, and varieties of it were found in some northern and western states whose statutes contained similar, if not so rigorously-enforced statutes. But he has shown that the nexus of forced labor practices - convict labor, sharecropping, peonage - were all attempts to recreate the social and economic subjection of freed blacks without technical violation of the 13th Amendment.
But Russian and Soviet practice demonstrate, however, that racial distinctions are not necessary in creating (or recreating) servitude. Like the American South Russia also had a forced labor system, in which poor "freedmen" were trapped into convict labor through the 19th and early 20th century. Here, class was as great a beating stick as race when it came to applying social control to a "backward" and "lawless" and "ignorant" peasantry. The practice was, of course, continued on an industrial scale in the Soviet era, but here too there is analogy to the use of convict labor by corporate capitalism in mines, construction, and railroads in the postbellum South. It is precisely because of this all-too-apparent analogy that cold war partisans will object to Mr. Blackmon's book. Habits of servitude die hard in a culture once they've taken root.
The Soviet gulag was disbanded in the 1950s largely because it was no longer cost-effective, and this also applies to the use of forced Southern labor. Whether sharecropping, peonage, or penal farming, such human-intensive use of unskilled labor was seen as a drain on development by the mid-century. This was ultimately more important in ending the American "new" slave system than the legislative action of enlightened Rooseveltian law enforcement, as Mr. Blackman maintains in his book's conclusion. As Blackmom himself should know from his study of how this system was fostered and ignored at all levels of government, sentiment played no role in it whatsoever, and that included its abolition as well as its creation.
A timely and worthwhile book, even with my criticisms and reservations. Read it, and learn what you're not supposed to know.
2008-12-07




amazing
Everyone should read this book. It is a well-written account of American history and oppression that is often left out of textbooks and shamefully continues today through poverty. 2008-11-11




Good conditon but took long to get here
This book was in good/new condition but it took forever to get here. Even though the receiving dates was two weeks it got here on the second to last day so if you need this book for class order it from someone else who guarantees faster shipping. 2008-11-05




Only one small complaint
I could not put this book down. After I finished I went on to read about white slavery just so that I had a well rounded idea of what was going on during this time. The only small complaint I have is that when authors talk about chattel slavery they all tend to group African Americans together as in "when African Americans got the right to vote" etc. This needs to be more specific if we are ever to really have a grasp of that history. African American men got the "right to vote" in 1850, Women as a group in 1920. I had to pen in "men" and "male" throughout my copy of this book for the next reader to remember white/black male/female all have specific histories in this country. But other than that, I could not put it down. 2008-10-02




Very quick delivery!
Every time I order books directly from Amazon it arrives within three days, and I love that.
Thanks Amazon!
Karyn
2008-09-16

