Theodore Kornweibel Jr’s scientific contributions

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Publications (3)


Blacks and Reds: Race and Class in Conflict, 1919–1990
  • Article

July 1995

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18 Reads

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8 Citations

History Reviews of New Books

Earl Ofari Hutchinson

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Theodore Kornweibel Jr

In this important new study, Earl Ofari Hutchinson examines in detail the American Communist Party's efforts to win the allegiance of black Americans and the various responses to this from the black community. Beginning with events of the 1920s, Hutchinson discusses at length the historical forces that encouraged alliances between African Americans and the predominately white American Communist Party. He also takes an indepth look at why, and how, issues of class, party ideology, and racial identity stood in the way of a partnership of black leaders and communists in the United States. Blacks and Reds addresses landmark events surrounding associations between communists and black activists. Hutchinson examines, among other things, how Paul Robeson and W.E.B. DuBois's support of party activities affected their lives and how the Communist Party used the trial of Angela Davis to promote its own interests. His scope ranges from oft forgotten signs of misdirection, such as how communists' efforts to express racial sympathy in the early 1950s contributed to their own near destruction during the McCarthy era, to a thorough discussion of how the Party's effort to gain a foothold in Stokely Carmichael's SNCC, Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam, Martin Luther King's SCLC, and Huey Newton and Eldridge Cleaver's Black Panthers shook up the civil rights movement by triggering the FBI's secret war against King, Malcolmi X, and others considered to be black radicals.



Citations (2)


... For the proponents of the radical politics thesis, what distinguished Afro-Caribbean immigrants from African Americans in the early part of the 20th century was the former's willingness to participate in or collaborate with Communists. With the notable exception of the World War II period, when the military alliance between the United States and the Soviet Union briefly brought Communists into the mainstream of American civil society (Plummer, 1996;Von Eschen, 1997), the Communist Party-USA (CP-USA) had trouble making inroads in Black communities in the early decades of the 20th century (Berg, 2007;Cruse, 1967;Hutchinson, 1995;H. T. Murray, 1967;Naison, 1983;Record, 1951). ...

Reference:

Model Blacks or “Ras the Exhorter”: A Quantitative Content Analysis of Black Newspapers’ Coverage of the First Wave of Afro-Caribbean Immigration to the United States
Blacks and Reds: Race and Class in Conflict, 1919–1990
  • Citing Article
  • July 1995

History Reviews of New Books

... Unlike the Great Black Migration from the early to mid-1900s, in which millions of Black people voluntarily left the segregated South seeking social, economic, and political opportunities in Northern and Midwestern cities (Davis & Donaldson, 1975;Drake & Cayton, 1945;Farley & Allen, 1987;Lemann, 1991;E. Lewis, 1991;Rose, 1969;Trotter, 1991), or the return Black migration to the South that is presently underway (Stack, 1996;Tamman & Suggs, 2001;U.S. Census Bureau, 2000a, 2000b, the migration by most of the Black people out of New Orleans as a result of Hurricane Katrina has been instantaneous-and involuntarily. This forced migration was caused not solely by the torrential force of the waves from the hurricane but because of human neglect in rescuing the mostly Black and poor residents of New Orleans and insuring that the levees were sufficient to withstand the force and weight of a hurricane and its resulting waters (Dyson, 2006;Freeman, 2007;Hartman & Squires, 2006;Lee, 2006). ...

The Great Migration in Historical Perspective: New Dimensions of Race, Class, & Gender
  • Citing Article
  • June 1993

History Reviews of New Books