Twice the Work of Free Labor: The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New SouthFor the first time in a generation chain gangs have reappeared on the roads of the American South. Associated in the past with racial terrorism, this cruel and unusual punishment should invoke strong memories. But, in the rush to embrace ever-harsher sanctions, the American public has ignored the troubling history of Southern punishment. Twice the Work of Free Labor is the first book-length study of the history of the Southern convict-lease system and its successor, the chain gang. For nearly a century after the abolition of slavery, convicts labored in the South's mines, railroad camps, brickyards, turpentine farms and then road gangs, under abject conditions. The vast majority of these prisoners were African Americans. In this timely book, Alex Lichtenstein reveals the origins of this vicious penal slavery, explains its persistent and widespread popularity among whites, and charts its unhappy contribution to the rebirth of the South in the decades following the Civil War. The book also offers an original analysis of the post-Civil War South's political economy. Lichtenstein suggests that, after emancipation, forced black labor was exploited not by those who yearned for the social order of the slave South, but by the region's most ardent advocates of progress. The convict-lease and chain gang allowed a New South to rise while preserving white supremacy. |
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Table des matières
| 1 | |
| 17 | |
| 73 | |
Joe Browns Mines | 105 |
Convict Resistance | 126 |
From Convict Lease | 152 |
Forced Labor and Progress | 186 |
Index | 255 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Twice the Work of Free Labor: The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the ... Alex Lichtenstein Affichage d'extraits - 1996 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
African-Americans agricultural Alabama American Annual Report antebellum Assembly Atlanta Biennial Report Birmingham District black convicts black labor brick Brown Papers capital capitalist cent chain gang coal and iron coal mines Coalburg committee company's contractors convict camps convict labor convict lease Convict Lease System convict mines crime criminal Division of Mines File Folder forced labor free labor free miners GDAH Geological Survey Georgia General Assembly Governor Governor's Correspondence History Inspectors of Convicts Investigation James Milton Smith January Joseph Joseph Mackey Brown Journal Julius Julius L labor force lessees manufacturing Mineral Resources negro North Carolina number of convicts Old South operators penal labor penal system pig iron plantation planters political Pratt Principal Keeper Printer Prison Commission prison labor Proceedings production Public Roads punishment race racial railroad Reconstruction Republicans Rising Fawn slave slavery social Southern Good Roads state's Steel strike task Tennessee Division Tracy City University Press USGS
Fréquemment cités
Page 252 - Lawrence Levine, Black Culture and Black Consciousness: Afro-American Folk Thought from Slavery to Freedom (New York: Oxford University Press, 1977), pp.
Page 37 - Who built the seven gates of Thebes? The books are filled with names of kings. Was it kings who hauled the craggy blocks of stone? Bertolt Brecht, “A Worker Reads History
Page 186 - There is no document of civilization that is not at the same time a document of barbarism. Walter Benjamin, “Theses on the Philosophy of
Page 152 - They point with pride to the roads you built for them, They ride in comfort over the rails you laid for them. They put hammers in your hands And said — Drive so much before sundown.
Page 28 - a right to go on the land to plant, work, and gather the crop.... The case of the cropper is rather a mode of paying wages than a tenancy,
Page 6 - There is, in very fact, no Old South and no New There is only The South. Fundamentally, as it was in the beginning it is now, and, if God please, it shall be evermore.
Page xvii - persisting myth about the triumph of the spirit that colors the disaster with a rosy tinge and helps us to manage the unimaginable without having to look at its naked and ugly face.
Page 7 - a latifundia economy, a dominant antidemocratic aristocracy, and a weak and dependent commercial and industrial class, unable and unwilling to push forward
Page xi - What hold can another manufacturer have upon his workmen, equal to what my manufacturer would have upon his? What other master is there that can reduce his workmen, if idle, to a situation next to starving, without suffering them to go elsewhere?... And who, so far from being able to raise their wages by combination, are obliged to take whatever pittance he thinks it most
Page 96 - told the Alabama General Assembly that “convict labor competing with free labor is advantageous to the mine owner. If all were free miners they could combine and strike and thereby put up the price of coal,

