
The Crucible of Race, a major reinterpretation of black-white relations in the South, was widely acclaimed on publication and compared favorably to two of the seminal books on Southern history: Wilbur J. Cash's The Mind of the South and C. Vann Woodward's The Strange Career of Jim Crow. Representing 20 years of research and writing on the history of the South, The Crucible of Race explores the large topic of Southern race relations for a span of a century and a half. Oxford is pleased to make available an abridgement of this parent volume: A Rage for Order preserves all the theme lines that were advanced in the original volume and many of the individual stories. As in Crucible of Race, Williamson here confronts the awful irony that the war to free blacks from slavery also freed racism. He examines the shift in the power base of Southern white leadership after 1850 and recounts the terrible violence done to blacks in the name of self-protection. This condensation of one of the most important interpretations of Southern history is offered as a means by which a large audience can grasp the essentials of black-white relations--a problem that persists to this day and one with which we all must contend--North and South, black and white.
How did the post-Emancipation era in the American South facilitate the institutionalization of systemic racism rather than its eradication? Joel Williamson, a historian specializing in Southern culture, argues that the collapse of slavery paradoxically catalyzed a more virulent and structured form of white supremacy. By analyzing the shift in Southern white leadership after 1850, the text posits that the transition from a paternalistic slave system to a rigid racial hierarchy was a deliberate, violent response to the perceived threat of black autonomy.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians frequently categorize this work alongside foundational texts like C. Vann Woodward's The Strange Career of Jim Crow for its significant contribution to Southern historiography. Readers often note that while the prose is accessible to a general audience, it maintains a high level of analytical rigor regarding the psychological and political underpinnings of racial violence.
Page Count:
332
Publication Date:
1986-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190281367
ISBN-13:
9780190281366
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