
eBook - ePub
Getting Away with Murder
The Twentieth-Century Struggle for Civil Rights in the U.S. Senate
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Getting Away with Murder
The Twentieth-Century Struggle for Civil Rights in the U.S. Senate
About this book
Throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, the U.S. Congress engaged in bitter debates on whether to enact a federal law that would prosecute private citizens who lynched black Americans. In Getting Away with Murder, the fundamental question under scrutiny is whether Southern Democrats' racist attitudes toward black Americans pardoned the atrocities of lynching. The book investigates underlying motives of opposition to Senate filibustering and invites an intellectual discussion on why Southern Democrats thought states' rights were the remedy to lynching, when, in fact, the phenomenon was a baffling national crisis. A rebuttal to this query may include notions that congressional investigations into state-protected rights were deemed unconstitutional. In a unifying theme, the appeal ties into questions of the federalism-civil rights debate by noting intervals that warrant research and advancing new perspectives intended to accentuate the matrices of race-based politics. To examine the federalism-civil rights debate, this book asks three practical questions: (1) Would Southern Democrats suspend their friendships with private citizens and enact a federal law that would prosecute them for lynching? (2) Was the national government limited in its constitutional power to protect black Americans from private citizens who organized themselves as lynch mobs? (3) Were concerns for states' rights the core reasons for Senate filibustering, or did Southern Democrats' argument for states' rights support the lie of racism?
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Yes, you can access Getting Away with Murder by Vanessa A. Holloway in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & African American Studies. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- The Conduit to Getting Away with Murder
- “No” with Authority, the Solid South in Congress
- Blaming Racism and the Democratic Solidarity in the Senate
- White Supremacy, the Unwritten Law of the Land
- The Disappointment, Stymied by Old Southern Politics
- Appendix A
- Appendix B
- Selected Bibliography