Black Reconstruction: An Essay Toward a History of the Part which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860-1880W.E.B. Du Bois called Black Reconstruction, first published in 1934, his "magnum opus." A massive reinterpretation of the Civil War and Reconstruction with African Americans as actors rather than pawns, it presaged postwar changes in prevailing interpretations of southern history, as well as the rise of black militancy in the 1960s. |
Contents
THE BLACK WORKER 3 m ཨཽ II THE WHITE WORKER | 17 |
THE PLANTER | 32 |
THE GENERAL STRIKE | 40 |
Copyright | |
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39th Congress Abolitionists Abraham Lincoln Alabama American Andrew Johnson army became bill Black Codes black labor capital capitalists carpetbaggers Charles Sumner citizens civil rights colored committee Confederate Constitution convention cotton courts debt declared democracy Democrats dictatorship disfranchised economic election emancipation equal Federal fight Florida Fourteenth Amendment free Negroes freedmen Freedmen's Bureau freedom Georgia Governor hand House ignorant increased industry intelligent land leaders legislation legislature Lincoln Louisiana majority mass matter ment military million Mississippi movement nation Negro labor Negro suffrage Negro vote North Northern officers organized Orleans party passed persons plantations planters political power poor whites President protection public schools race rebel Reconstruction represented Republican resolution right to vote scalawags Senate slavery slaves social soldiers South Carolina Southern Stevens taxation taxes Thaddeus Stevens tion Union United universal suffrage Virginia voters wages wanted Warmoth white and black white labor workers