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portada Deep South Democrats. Paradoxical Politics in the Age of Civil Rights
Type
Physical Book
Publisher
Collection
Making the Modern South
Year
2026
Language
English
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
Dimensions
22.90 x 15.20 x 2.20 cm
ISBN13
9780807186558

Deep South Democrats. Paradoxical Politics in the Age of Civil Rights

James O. Heath;David Goldfield (Author) · LSU Press · Hardcover

Deep South Democrats. Paradoxical Politics in the Age of Civil Rights - James O. Heath;David Goldfield

New Book Imported to Austria
Delivery: 13 Nov - 20 Nov Shipping: 79 to 83 business days.
67,38 €
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67,38 €

Synopsis "Deep South Democrats. Paradoxical Politics in the Age of Civil Rights"

James O. Heath's Deep South Democrats is the story of three men who redefined the southern political landscape through unique voting records in health, housing, labor, and education. Olin Johnston of South Carolina and John Sparkman and Lister Hill of Alabama contributed to the massive impact of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal in the southern states, though the reforms didn't affect just their constituents: the New Deal's characteristics of federal intervention and economic empowerment influenced their own political outlook for decades. While the senators' consistent defense of segregation stood in stark contrast to the purported "reluctance" of their racism in their election campaigns, the benefits of their economic liberalism benefited Black communities in their states. This, in turn, ensured a remarkable measure of support among Black southerners who were registered to vote and gave the three of them an unbeatable edge over opponents who were economically and racially conservative.

In focusing on the paradoxical politics of three Deep South Democrats, Heath avoids the pitfalls of overcategorization while entertaining two possibilities. The first is that Johnston, Sparkman, and Hill privately supported the advancement of Black rights but were restrained from doing so publicly by the political realities in their states, which forced them to maintain a strict adherence to racial segregation, albeit while pursuing reforms in social policy that benefited Black and white residents alike. The second is that the three of them held racist beliefs but avoided the racist hyperbole of their contemporaries because they possessed a sense of duty to their communities. Heath's analysis considers the influence of region, rather than state, alongside tradition and family history, to explain how the reluctant racism of these three men proved unusually influential in the age of civil rights.

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