Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Great Depression (Fred W. Morrison Series in Southern Studies)

Robin D. G. Kelley

Paperback

OUT OF PRINT

A groundbreaking contribution to the history of the "long Civil Rights movement," Hammer and Hoe tells the story of how, during the 1930s and 40s, Communists took on Alabama's repressive, racist police state to fight for economic justice, civil and political rights, and racial equality.

The Alabama Communist Party was made up of working people without a Euro-American radical political tradition: devoutly religious and semiliterate black laborers and sharecroppers, and a handful of whites, including unemployed industrial workers, housewives, youth, and renegade liberals. In this book, Robin D. G. Kelley reveals how the experiences and identities of these people from Alabama's farms, factories, mines, kitchens, and city streets shaped the Party's tactics and unique political culture. The result was a remarkably resilient movement forged in a racist world that had little tolerance for radicals.

After discussing the book's origins and impact in a new preface written for this twenty-fifth-anniversary edition, Kelley reflects on what a militantly antiracist, radical movement in the heart of Dixie might teach contemporary social movements confronting rampant inequality, police violence, mass incarceration, and neoliberalism.

ISBN 9780807842881
List price $17.95
Publisher The University of North Carolina Press
Year of publication 0
Other editions:
Medium_zipview

Third International

The Third International aka the Communist International or COMINTERN, composed of Socialist parties who broke with the Second International on the question of support for World War I. Eventually degenerated into a mechanism for imposing Soviet orthodoxy


Marxism

A selection of titles related to the Marxian tradition


Some things that are essential