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Book Cover for: Racism and the Class Struggle: Further Pages from a Black Worker's Notebook, James Boggs

Racism and the Class Struggle: Further Pages from a Black Worker's Notebook

James Boggs

The first collection of James Boggs' essays, which became seminal texts for the Civil Rights and Black Power Movement activism of the 1960s

James Boggs wrestles with the problems of the specific character of American capitalism and American democracy, the historic mission of the black revolution in the United States, and the need for the 1960s black movement to develop theoretically and organizationally. This collection of essays includes Bogg's remarkable "The City Is the Black Man's Land," an article anticipating the black nationalist programs that were to emerge in the later 1960s. Boggs hails the coming of what was at the time the new slogan of the black revolution with an essay called, "Black Power: A Scientific Concept Whose Time Has Come." In further essays, he hammers at his theme of the "second civil war" and black control of the cities. In his concluding piece, written especially for this book, Boggs evaluates and analyzes the movement of the late 1960s and its various groups.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Monthly Review Press
  • Publish Date: Feb 11st, 2020
  • Pages: 192
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.00in - 5.25in - 0.44in - 0.49lb
  • EAN: 9781583678763
  • Categories: • Sociology - General• Cultural & Ethnic Studies - American - African American & Bl• Civil Rights

About the Author

Boggs, James: - James Boggs (1919-1993) was an African American auto worker and radical activist raised in rural Alabama. His books include The American Revolution: Pages from a Negro Worker's Notebook and Revolution and Evolution in the Twentieth Century (with Grace Lee Boggs), both published by Monthly Review Press.

Praise for this book

"Boggs's new book is heady, controversial writing--pungent polemical essays and speeches--which spells out forcefully his Marxist-Fanonist thesis that 'the issues of the black revolt are fundamentally rooted in the American system itself.'"

-- Publishers' Weekly