The urban rebellions that rocked Miami in 1980, and other large
cities in the United States during the 1960s, can be looked at as
contributory components of the Black freedom movement. This new
study argues that they are, on one level, a tactical response to
contemporary forms of White domination and, on another level, an
act in which key core values of the African American experience are
sustained. The book provides an overview of racial violence in
America, from the slaveocracy of the 18th and 19th centuries, to
the urban rebellions of the late 20th century. It shows that in
Black-White intergroup relations, Whites have used violence and the
threat of violence to repress and intimidate Blacks. Blacks have
used violence as a way of resisting White domination. The form that
violence has taken has been shaped by prevailing societal
conditions.
Importantly, the book concentrates on the essence of Black-White
intergroup relations. In doing so, the thematic and cultural
propensities that pattern the reality of those relations are
clearer. Foremost is the practice of White domination and the Black
response of resistance, which seeks to end that domination and
encourage freedom and justice. The book ends by going beyond
current thinking and looks to African American core values as key
referents to examine Black violence.
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