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Douglas A. Blackmon

    Douglas A. Blackmon is een Amerikaanse auteur, bekroond met de Pulitzerprijs, wiens precieze en welsprekende werk vergeten hoofdstukken uit de Amerikaanse geschiedenis aan het licht brengt. Hij onderzoekt nauwgezet doelbewuste systemen van racistische onderdrukking en redt talloze wreedheden uit de vergetelheid. Blackmons schrijven richt zich op het herstellen van vergeten verhalen en het begrijpen van de mechanismen van onvrijwillige dienstbaarheid die tot in de 20e eeuw voortduurden. Zijn werk levert een essentiële bijdrage aan het begrijpen van een complex verleden en de blijvende impact ervan.

    Slavery by Another Name
    • Slavery by Another Name

      The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II - Winner of the Pulitzer Prize

      • 480bladzijden
      • 17 uur lezen

      In this groundbreaking historical exposé, Douglas A. Blackmon reveals a dark chapter in American history—an “Age of Neoslavery” that persisted from the Civil War's aftermath until World War II. Following the war, laws were enacted to intimidate African Americans, leading to the arbitrary arrest of tens of thousands who were burdened with exorbitant fines and charged for their own arrests. Unable to pay these “debts,” many were sold as forced laborers to coal mines, lumber camps, and plantations. Others were seized by southern landowners and coerced into years of involuntary servitude. Government officials leased falsely imprisoned blacks to entrepreneurs and corporations, including U.S. Steel, seeking cheap labor. This system exploited legal loopholes and federal policies that discouraged the prosecution of whites for holding black workers against their will. It poured millions into southern treasuries and terrorized African Americans seeking political participation. Drawing from original documents and personal narratives, the work uncovers the lost stories of those who transitioned from freedom back into servitude and highlights the resistance against human trafficking. It also examines the modern companies that profited from neoslavery and the system's decline in the 1940s, influenced by fears of enemy propaganda regarding American racial abuses. This account serves as a sobering reminder of a little-known crime against Afri

      Slavery by Another Name
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