
A searing--and sobering--account of the legal and extra-legal means by which systemic white racism has kept Black Americans 'in their place' from slavery to police and vigilante killings of Black men and women, from 1619 to the present.From the arrival of the first English settlers in America until now-a span of four centuries-a minority of white men have created, managed, and perpetuated their control of every major institution, public and private, in American society. And no group in America has suffered more from the harms imposed by white men's laws than African Americans, with punishment by law often replaced by extra-legal means. Over the centuries, thousands of victims have been murdered by lynching, white mobs, and appalling massacres.In White Men's Law, the eminent scholar Peter Irons makes a powerful and persuasive case that African Americans have always been held back by systemic racism in all major institutions that can hold power over them. Based on a wide range of sources, from the painful words of former slaves to test scores that reveal how our education system has failed Black children, this searing and sobering account of legal and extra-legal violence against African Americans peels away the fictions and myths expressed by white racists. The centerpiece of Irons' account is a 1935 lynching in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The episode produced a photograph of a blonde white girl of about seven looking at the hanging, bullet-riddled body of Rubin Stacy, who was accused of assaulting a white woman. After analyzing this gruesome murder and the visual evidence left behind, Irons poses a foundational question: What historical forces preceded and followed this lynching to spark resistance to Jim Crow segregation, especially in schools that had crippled Black children with inferior education? The answers are rooted in the systemic racism-especially in the institutions of law and education--that African Americans, and growing numbers of white allies, are deman
How have legal and extra-legal frameworks been utilized by white institutions to maintain systemic control over Black Americans from 1619 to the present? Peter Irons, a legal scholar and historian, synthesizes four centuries of American history to argue that systemic racism is not an accidental byproduct but a constructed feature of public and private institutions. By examining primary source testimonies, educational data, and specific instances of state-sanctioned and vigilante violence, Irons demonstrates how law and extra-legal force have functioned in tandem to suppress African American advancement.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a rigorous examination of the intersection between American jurisprudence and racial violence. Readers frequently note the density of the historical research and the author's ability to connect specific acts of terror to broader institutional failures.
Page Count:
311
Publication Date:
2021-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190914963
ISBN-13:
9780190914967
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