9781847252388-1847252389-This Mob Will Surely Take My Life: Lynchings in the Carolinas, 1871-1947

This Mob Will Surely Take My Life: Lynchings in the Carolinas, 1871-1947

ISBN-13: 9781847252388
ISBN-10: 1847252389
Edition: 0
Author: Bruce E. Baker
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: Continuum
Format: Hardcover 256 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781847252388
ISBN-10: 1847252389
Edition: 0
Author: Bruce E. Baker
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: Continuum
Format: Hardcover 256 pages

Summary

This Mob Will Surely Take My Life: Lynchings in the Carolinas, 1871-1947 (ISBN-13: 9781847252388 and ISBN-10: 1847252389), written by authors Bruce E. Baker, was published by Continuum in 2008. With an overall rating of 3.6 stars, it's a notable title among other Murder & Mayhem (True Crime) books. You can easily purchase or rent This Mob Will Surely Take My Life: Lynchings in the Carolinas, 1871-1947 (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Murder & Mayhem books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $1.

Description

This book traces the history of mob violence in North and South Carolina, probing the origins of a phenomenon that has left an open wound in the American psyche.
Lynching marked the violent outer boundaries of race and class relations in the American South between Reconstruction and the civil rights era. Everyday interactions could easily escalate into mob violence and did so thousands of times. Bruce E. Baker examines this important aspect of American history by studying seven lynchings in North and South Carolina and looking behind the superficial accounts and explanations provided at the time to explain the deeper causes and wider contexts of these events.

Many studies of lynching begin only after Reconstruction had ended and African- Americans found themselves with little political power. This Mob Will Surely Take My Life, however, provides the most thorough study yet written of the Ku Klux Klan's most violent episode - the killing of thirteen black militia members in Union, South Carolina, in 1871- to argue that this act of mob violence set the stage in important ways for the entire lynching era. Enmities born in Reconstruction lingered afterwards and lay behind an 1887 lynching in York County, South Carolina. As lynching became an unsurprising part of life in the South, African-Americans even found that they could use it themselves, in one case to punish a child's killer and in another to settle a church's factional squabbles. The book ends with a discussion of the varied forces that opposed lynching and how, by the 1930s, they had begun to be effective.

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