Book detailing three centuries of slave and working class rebellion in the southern states of the US.
In 1891, when coal companies in eastern Tennessee brought in cheap convict labor to take over their jobs, workers responded by storming the stockades, freeing the prisoners, and loading them onto freight trains. Over the next year, tactics escalated to include burning company property and looting company stores. This was one of the largest insurrections in US working-class history. It happened at the same time as the widely publicized northern labor war in Homestead, Pennsylvania. And it was largely ignored, then and now.
Dixie Be Damned engages seven similarly "hidden" insurrectionary episodes in Southern history to demonstrate the region's long arc of revolt. Countering images of the South as pacified and conservative, this adventurous retelling presents history in the rough. Not the image of the South many expect, this is the South of maroon rebellion, wildcat strikes, and Robert F. Williams's book Negroes with Guns, a South where the dispossessed refuse to quietly suffer their fate. This is people's history at its best: slave revolts, multiracial banditry, labor battles, prison uprisings, urban riots, and more.
Contents:
An Introduction
INTERLUDE I
A Subtle yet Restless Fire: Attacking Slavery from the Dark Fens of the Great Dismal
INTERLUDE II
Ogeechee Till Death: Expropriation and Communization in Low-country Georgia
INTERLUDE III
The Lowry Wars: Attacking Reconstruction and Reaction in Robeson County, North Carolina
INTERLUDE IV
The Stockade Stood Burning: Rebellion and the Convict Lease in Tennessee’s Coalfields
INTERLUDE V
Wild Hearts in the Southern Mills: Women in the Strike Wave against the Textile Industry, 1929–1930
INTERLUDE VI
From Rebel to Citizen and Back Again: Civil Rights, Black Power, and Urban Riots in the New South
INTERLUDE VII
“We Asked For Life!”: On the 1975 Revolt at the North Carolina Correctional Center for Women
INTERLUDE VIII
Conclusion: Preliminary Notes for an Anarchist Historiography of the American South
Comments