Reluctant reformers : racism and social reform movements in the United States

by Robert L. Allen

Other authorsPamela P. Allen (Author), Jamelle Bouie (Foreword)
Paperback, 1983

Status

Available

Pages

337

Collection

Publication

New York. : OR Books, 2021.

Description

Reluctant Reformers explores the centrality of racism to American politics through the origins, internal dynamics, and leadership of the major democratic and social justice movements between the early nineteenth century and the end of World War II. It focuses in particular on the abolitionists, the Populist Party, the Progressive reformers, and the women's suffrage, labor, and socialist and communist movements. Despite their achievements, virtually all these predominantly white movements failed to oppose, capitulated to, or even advocated racism at critical junctures in their history, with their efforts undercut by their inability to build and sustain a mass movement of both Black and white Americans. Reluctant Reformers examines both the structural roots of racism in US radical movements and the impact of racist ideologies on the white-dominated core of each movement, how some whites resisted these pressures, and how Black people engaged with these movements. This edition includes a postscript describing the Black freedom movement of the 1960s and the central role it has played in the development of today's radical social justice movements.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member lschiff
I just finished this incredible book and whole heartily recommend it to anyone and everyone, but especially those white people who have been involved in any type of social justice work, whether "radical" or "reformist." The Allens present an incredibly rich historical analysis of the dynamic
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interplay between racism and class exploitation/accommodation through several distinct and significant periods. I learned so much about the eras I had only superficial knowledge of (particularly the populist and progressive eras) and had lots of important gaps filled in in the other eras (e.g. the woman's suffrage period and the socialist and communist periods). The common thread is the consistent willingness of white people, however radical, to opportunistically betray black people and to persist in racist behavior and choose racist strategies at the expense of larger victories, victories that would benefit so many more people, but that would require letting go of notions of white supremacy and the privileges for white people associated with it. This is critical stuff to come to come to grips with and though it is tragic and angering (and momentarily disheartening), will hopefully serve as a spur to doing social justice work better.

Although I am giving this book five stars, I do wish it had covered the gay liberation movement and that an additional postscript had been written covering at least the first decade of the 21st century.
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Language

Physical description

337 p.; 24 cm

ISBN

978-1-68219-278-8 / 9781682192788

Rating

(3 ratings; 4.3)
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