Timothy Thomas Fortune
Black and White: Land, Labor and Politics in the South.
Arno Press and The New York Times, 1968. The American Negro: His History and Literature. Reprint of the 1884 edition. 310 pages.
Volume, measuring approximately 5.25" x 7", is bound in white and black cloth, with black and white lettering to covers. Book shows light shelfwear. Binding is solid. Interior is clean and bright.
"...The book is divided into two parts. In the first half Fortune bitterly and eloquently denounced the racism of white America which, in his view, had reduced the Negro to a position worse than slavery. Black people, he wrote, "are more absolutely under the control of the Southern whites; they are more systematically robbed of their labor; they are more poorly housed, clothed and fed, than under the slave regime." In the second half of the book Fortune wandered into the bypaths of Marxism and Henry Georgism. He portrayed the Negro's position in the South as similar to that of the laboring and peasant classes the world over who found themselves under the oppressive tyranny of "land monopoly" and "corporation greed." (Foreword by James M. McPherson)
top of page
$35.00Price
bottom of page