In the years following World War II, the national Democratic Party aligned its agenda more and more with the goals of the civil rights movement. By contrast, a majority of southern Democrats remained as committed as ever to a traditional, segregationist ideology. Through the career of Senator James Eastland, one of the mid-century's most prominent politicians, author Maarten Zwiers explores the uneasy, yet mutually beneficial relationship between conservative southerners and the increasingly liberal party to which they belonged. Mississippi Democrat James "Big Jim" Eastland began an influential four-decade career in the United States Senate in 1941, ultimately rising to become president pro tempore of the Senate, a position that placed him third in the line of presidential succession. His reputation for toughness developed from his unfailing and ruthless opposition to greater civil rights and his concern over the global spread of communism, as he believed participants in the two movements were working together to undermine the American way of life. Zwiers contends that despite Eastland's extreme positions, he still managed to maintain influence through productive relationships with his Senate colleagues-liberal as well as conservative. Though the progressive wing of the Democratic Party continued to push for stronger civil rights legislation, they valued compromise with southern senators like Eastland in order to ensure support from a region the Democrats could ill afford to lose. While Eastland's campaigning rhetoric was inflammatory, his ability to operate within the national political structure by leveraging moderate concessions contributed to his lengthy and effective career. Drawing on recently opened archival records, Maarten Zwiers offers a nuanced portrait of a man frequently portrayed as a southern zealot. Senator James Eastland provides a case study of the complicated relationship between party and party members that allowed Democrats to maintain power in the South for much of the twentieth century.
In this fascinating study of race, politics, and economics in Mississippi, Chris Myers Asch tells the story of two extraordinary personalities--Fannie Lou Hamer and James O. Eastland--who represented deeply opposed sides of the civil rights ...
Moye, J. Todd, Let the People Decide: Black Freedom and White Resistance Movements in Sunflower County, Mississippi, 1945–1986. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina ... Newman, Robert P. Owen Lattimore and the “Loss” of China.
Kluger, Simple justice, 185. “There's never a dull". Collier's, Feb. 23, 1952. “get even with Maryland”. Long, Marshalling justice, 7. “there will be an Ethiop". Kluger, Simple justice, 192. “I have never sent".
From Square Peg:I had been a Senator only a few weeks when one night I noticed James Eastland walking toward me on the Senate floor. At the time, he was...
Mark Stern, Calculating Vision: Kennedy, Johnson and Civil Rights (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1992), 210–26. 62. On the legislative history and political context of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, see Lawson, ...
Griffin, Bob, 187 Grosshans, Roland, 58 H Habib, Philip,170 Hansen, George, 247 Hardesty, Howard, 125 Harkin,Tom, 132 Harriman,Averell andPam, 106–107 Hart, Gary,125, 190 Hart, Phil,125, 133, 135 Hassan,King, 152 Hathaway,Bill, ...
... juliet b. schor and douglas b. holt THE CONSUMER SOCIETY READER (PB, 1-56584-598-6, 528 pages) The definitive reader on the nature and evolution of consumer society. sarah anderson and john cavanagh, with thea lee FIELD GUIDE TO THE ...
For president, board members chose realtor Myron Parker.30 The board flourished under Parker's leadership, quickly becoming the most influential voice in city affairs. Stepping into the void that disfranchisement left, it offered elite ...
This book examines the African American struggle for access to public libraries in the South, bringing together and examining the three distinct fields involved—Southern Studies, African American Studies, and Library Studies—to inform ...
In this groundbreaking book, historian Teishan A. Latner contends that in the era of decolonization, the Vietnam War, and Black Power, socialist Cuba claimed center stage for a generation of Americans who looked to the insurgent Third World ...