List of tables and figures; Acknowledgements; Introduction; Part I. Cambridge, Maryland: 1. The making of the 'Negro revolt'; 2. The Fire This Time; 3. Falsely accused; Part II. Baltimore, Maryland: 4. The dream deferred; 5. The Holy Week Uprising of 1968; 6. One nation, two responses; Part III. York, Pennsylvania: 7. The promised land; 8. Fighting back; 9. An uneasy peace; Conclusion; Index.
Offers a rich description of the impact of the 1960s race riots in the United States whose legacy still haunts the nation.
Peter B. Levy is a Professor of History at York College of Pennsylvania, where he teaches US history classes. His books include Civil War on Race Street: The Civil Rights Movement in Cambridge, Maryland (2003).
'Levy's framing of these moments of violence as a 'Great Uprising'
is nothing short of brilliant. He has truly crafted an illuminating
narrative synthesis of these moments of violence, one that eschews
ideologically-driven analyses, which, for far too long, have
dominated the place of these urban uprisings in post-WWII US
history. I have been dreaming about a book like this one for years,
wishing one existed for me to assign to my classes. Finally, Levy
has given it to me in one, well-written volume.' Brian Purnell,
Bowdoin College, Maine
'By analyzing three of the hundreds of 'riots' that erupted between
1963 and 1972, Peter Levy makes a cogent case for reframing this
period as 'The Great American Uprising'. Levy upends popular and
scholarly assumptions about the chronology, geography, and protest
politics of these conflicts to explain how they justified
repressive rather than democratic solutions. The resulting book is
a must read for anyone seeking to understand and resist our
evolving urban crisis.' Erik Gellman, Roosevelt University,
Chicago
'Peter Levy's The Great Uprising is not only compelling and
impressive but also an exceptionally well-researched historical
account of the hundreds of black rebellions in the 1960s. He
demonstrates a mastery of the recent scholarship in Black Freedom
Studies, and presents that scholarship in an instructive fashion
that increases the educational value of this book for the
classroom.' Komozi Woodard, Sarah Lawrence College, New York
'Levy examines the period between 1963 and 1972, when over 750
'revolts' (also 'riots' or 'civil disorders') took place in the US
related to the fight for African Americans' civil rights. Levy
argues convincingly that these revolts and their concomitant impact
on American society should be viewed as part of a 'Great Uprising'
that is an epochal event in American history, comparable in
importance to WW I or the Great Depression. … Levy highlights the
impact that the 'Uprising' had on ordinary Americans living in the
smaller communities where so many of the revolts occurred. The
Great Uprising resuscitates important aspects of unrecovered
American history. Summing Up: Highly recommended.' E. F. Wallace,
Choice
'The Great Uprising makes an important contribution to the growing
body of work that challenges traditional narratives of the civil
rights movement. … More importantly, Levy's argument that a good
deal of the blame for what happened and why during the Great
Uprising should be placed squarely on the shoulders of white
leaders is a point that needs emphasizing in a nation that still
routinely views African Americans as the cause of racial violence.'
Christopher A. Huff, H-1960s
'Levy makes splendid contributions to scholarship on the urban
insurrections that took place in hundreds of black communities in
the United States during the 1960s. Detailed accounts of battles in
the cities of Cambridge, Maryland; Baltimore, Maryland; and York,
Pennsylvania, demonstrate vividly his arguments that the rebellions
took place in small, medium, and large cities, that they
encompassed both commodity and communal riots, and that the chasm
between white and black explanations and interpretations of the
violence set in motion in the 1960s a sharp racial polarization
that dominates the political culture of the United States to this
day.' George Lipsitz, The Journal of American History
'Peter Levy's book adds insights.' James McClure, York Daily Record
(www.ydr.com)
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