Democracy betrayed : the Wilmington race riot of 1898 and its legacy /
Saved in:
Imprint: | Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, 1998. |
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Description: | xvi, 301 p. ; 25 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/3400716 |
Table of Contents:
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- We Have Taken a City: A Centennial Essay
- Abraham H. Galloway: Wilmington's Lost Prophet and the Rise of Black Radicalism in the American South
- Murder, Memory, and the Flight of the Incubus
- The Two Faces of Domination in North Carolina, 1800-1898
- Captives of Wilmington: The Riot and Historical Memories of Political Conflict, 1865-1898
- Love, Hate, Rape, Lynching: Rebecca Latimer Felton and the Gender Politics of Racial Violence
- Class, Race, and Power in the New South: Racial Violence and the Delusions of White Supremacy
- Fear, Hope, and Struggle: Recasting Black North Carolina in the Age of Jim Crow
- Race, Rhetoric, and Revolution
- Violence, Manhood, and Black Heroism: The Wilmington Riot in Two Turn-of-the-Century African American Novels
- Wars for Democracy: African American Militancy and Interracial Violence in North Carolina during World War II
- Epilogue from Greensboro, North Carolina: Race and the Possibilities of American Democracy
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Index