Up South: Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia

Up South: Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia

by Matthew J. Countryman
ISBN-10:
0812220021
ISBN-13:
9780812220025
Pub. Date:
06/12/2007
Publisher:
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
ISBN-10:
0812220021
ISBN-13:
9780812220025
Pub. Date:
06/12/2007
Publisher:
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Up South: Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia

Up South: Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia

by Matthew J. Countryman
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Overview

Up South traces the efforts of two generations of black Philadelphians to turn the City of Brotherly Love into a place of promise and opportunity for all. Although Philadelphia rarely appears in histories of the modern civil rights struggle, the city was home to a vibrant and groundbreaking movement for racial justice in the years between World War II and the 1970s. By broadening the chronological and geographic parameters of the civil rights movement, Up South explores the origins of civil rights liberalism, the failure of the liberal program of antidiscrimination legislation and interracial coalition-building to deliver on its promise of racial equality, and the subsequent rise of the Black Power movement.

The Philadelphia movement occurred in three stages. During the 1940s and 1950s, liberal civil rights groups in the city successfully campaigned for Philadelphia's new City Charter to be the first in the nation to include a ban on racial discrimination in municipal employment, services, and contracts. Within a decade, however, black activists in the city were leading consumer boycotts and street protests against the city's liberal establishment for failing to overcome entrenched structures of racial inequality in labor markets, residential neighborhoods, and public schools. These protests set the stage both for some of the earliest experiments in affirmative action and for the emergence of the Black Power movement in Philadelphia.

Challenging the view that it was the inflammatory rhetoric of Black Power and the rising demands of black activists that derailed the civil rights movement, Up South documents the efforts of Black Power activists in Philadelphia to construct a vital and effective social movement that combined black nationalism's analysis of racism's constitutive role in American society with a program of grassroots community organizing and empowerment. On issues ranging from public education and urban renewal to police brutality and welfare, Philadelphia's Black Power movement remade the city's political landscape. And, in contrast to the top-down middle-class leadership of traditional civil rights groups, Black Power in Philadelphia fundamentally altered the composition of black leadership in the city to include a new cohort of neighborhood-based working-class and female black community activists.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812220025
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Publication date: 06/12/2007
Series: Politics and Culture in Modern America
Pages: 432
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Matthew J. Countryman is Associate Professor of History and American Culture at the University of Michigan.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Liberalism, Civil Rights, and Black Nationalism in the Urban North

PART I. RACE, RIGHTS, AND POSTWAR LIBERALISM
1. Civil Rights Liberalism in Philadelphia
2. The Other Philadelphia Story

PART II. A NORTHERN PROTEST MOVEMENT
3. Don't Buy Where You Can't Work
4. A False Democracy
5. Black Power and the Organizing Tradition

PART III. BLACK POWER IN THE POSTINDUSTRIAL CITY
6. Community Control of the Schools
7. The Gender Politics of Movement Leadership
8. From Protest to Politics

Conclusion
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments

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