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Hard Times on a Southern Chain Gang - Originally Published as the Novel Georgia Nigger (1932) (Paperback, Revised ed.)
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Hard Times on a Southern Chain Gang - Originally Published as the Novel Georgia Nigger (1932) (Paperback, Revised ed.)
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The New York Times praised Communist Party reporter John L.
Spivak's shocking 1932 novel Georgia Nigger as having "the weight
and authority of a sociological investigation." This Southern
Classics edition makes Spivak's narrative available to modern
readers, augmented with a new introduction by David A. Davis as
well as additional documents Spivak gathered during his
investigation into the abuses of the Depression-era Southern prison
system.
Georgia Nigger exposes the institutionalized system of
sharecropping, debt peonage, and exorbitant chain gang sentences
that trapped many southern black men in a cycle of labor
exploitation. Spivak (1897-1981) gained unlikely access to chain
gangs through the Georgia Prison Commission, and his book combines
elements of muckraking reportage and proletarian fiction to offer a
sensational and damning case for prison reform.
The plot follows David Jackson, the son of black sharecroppers, who
is released from a chain gang then almost immediately re-arrested
and bound over to a white planter as a peon. Jackson escapes
peonage only to be arrested again as a vagrant and sentenced to
another chain gang. He tries to escape again with the help of an
older inmate, but they are both captured and suffer torturous
punishments. Spivak's novel has merit both as revealing historical
account of sharecropping and chain gangs and as a compelling
literary allegory of an individual confronted by sweeping social
forces.
For Depression-era readers, Georgia Nigger provided outrage beyond
its obvious depictions of inhumanity and torture. The book hinges
on the crime of vagrancy, a charge often used to force into labor
persons without obvious means of income. In this particular
arrangement, being unemployed was a crime in itself, which allowed
for the exploitation of the economically vulnerable. Like many
writers and intellectuals of his era, Spivak sought to expose the
abuses committed against the nation's most impoverished. His book
combines elements of labor rabble-rousing, radical fiction, and
documentary photography to depict the lives of black Southerners
and to indict a flawed system of labor and justice.
General
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