No Right to an Honest Living - The Struggles of Boston's Black Workers in the Civil War Era - Grand Format

Edition en anglais

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Impassioned antislavery activists, writers, and orators made antebellum Boston famous as the nation's hub of radical abolitionism. For its Black workers,... Lire la suite
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Résumé

Impassioned antislavery activists, writers, and orators made antebellum Boston famous as the nation's hub of radical abolitionism. For its Black workers, however, Boston was far from a beacon of equality. In No Right to an Honest Living, Bancroft Prize-winning historian Jacqueline Jones offers a searing portrait of Black labor and white hypocrisy in nineteenth-century Boston. The city, she reveals, was the United States writ small : A place where the soaring rhetoric of egalitarianism was easy, but justice in the workplace was elusive.
Before, during, and after the Civil War, white abolitionists, Republicans, and city officials refused to press for equal employment opportunity for Black Bostonians, condemning most of them to poverty. Still, Jones finds, Black residents ingeniously created their own jobs and forged their own career paths. Whether as day laborers and domestics or as physicians and lawyers, they persisted in the face of monumental obstacles to make better lives for themselves and their families.

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    10/01/2023
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-1-5416-1979-1
  • EAN
    9781541619791
  • Format
    Grand Format
  • Présentation
    Relié
  • Nb. de pages
    532 pages
  • Poids
    0.808 Kg
  • Dimensions
    15,7 cm × 23,8 cm × 4,4 cm

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de Jacqueline Jones

Jacqueline Jones is Ellen C. Temple Chair in Women's History Emerita at the University of Texas at Austin and the past president of the American Historical Association. Winner of the Bancroft Prize for "Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow" and a two-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, she lives in Concord, Massachusetts.

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