
Unreconstructed
Slavery and Emancipation on Louisiana's Red River, 1820ā1880
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Unreconstructed
Slavery and Emancipation on Louisiana's Red River, 1820ā1880
About this book
Carin Peller-Semmens's Unreconstructed grapples with the longstanding, systemic effects of white supremacist brutality in northwest Louisiana, highlighting the constancy of racial subjugation in one of the most violent areas of the South. Tracing the commitment of the region's white slaveholders to racial violence from antebellum enslavement through to Reconstruction, Peller-Semmens unearths the durable ideology of mastery in the Red River region. She demonstrates that white supremacy and vigilante violence were slaveholding recloaked, and became effective, calibrated tools of political, social, and economic control during Reconstruction. White supremacist violenceādemonstrative, controlling, and visceralāattempted to redress mastery and subjugate and subdue newly emancipated Black individuals, imposing parameters on freedom.
Unreconstructed shows that white violence and racial control were foundational elements of the regional ideology and identity that Reconstruction galvanized. This ideology of mastery transcended class, creating a shared ethos steeped in racist behavior that remained crucial to postwar conceptions of white selfhood. Barbarity, harnessed boldly and overtly, formed the apex of a diversified campaign of persistent violence that chipped away at freedpeople's experience of freedom and resulted in several seismic incidents of racial violence, including the massacres at Shady Grove, Colfax, and Coushatta.
Peller-Semmens's arguments concerning racial power structures speak to race issues prevalent in America today, contributing significantly to a vibrant discourse on the inheritances of slavery and Reconstruction. Indeed, the implications of Reconstruction violence in this region still reverberate nationwide, making this corner of the South integral to the larger narrative of southern racism, white supremacy, and segregation.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- A NOTE ON LANGUAGE AND SOURCES
- Introduction. āRed River Is So Grandā: The Long Arc of Mastery
- 1 āThe Red River Bottoms Are Nearly the Best Cotton Lands in the Worldā: Settlement and Slaveholding
- 2 āFarming Here Is a Sure Road to a Fortuneā: The Cotton Complex and Enslavement
- 3 āThey Will Have Yankee Masters as Well as Usā: Secession and Confederate Commitment
- 4 āHead Heart and Soul of the Confederacyā: Cotton, the Red River Campaign, and Confederate Surrender
- 5 āOur Negroes Are Getting Too Independent to Workā: Labor Violence During Reconstruction
- 6 āThe Negro Question as Settled in Louisiana Foreverā: Political Violence and the Colfax Massacre
- 7 āInto the Hands of the Very Men That Held Us Slavesā: The Coushatta Massacre and White Supremacy
- Epilogue
- NOTES
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX