aAlways fascinating, often brilliant.a
--"Diplomatic History"
aHorneas study raises thorny yet critical questions and offers a
nuanced reading of both black emigrants and soldiers, cautioning
against an overly romanticized vision of either group. Readers
interested in the history of black menas military participation and
the broader history of American social and political history in the
First World War era will find this book a welcome addition to the
literature.a
-- Social History"
"Horne tells this story in expert fashion...The book's strengths
lie in its thick description of how perceptions about the
revolution affected black-white relations in the United States, an
achievement that points the way toward a better understanding of
civil rights history in the context of international
relations."
--"The Journal of American History"
Too often, when America speaks of race, it is in black and white
terms. Dialogue surrounding race seems always to position whiteness
as the center around which all other colors revolve. Meanwhile
relations between minorities are largely ignored, surfacing in our
consciousness only when tensions flare, as in the case of
Black-Korean violence in Los Angeles.
In our life times, Whites will no longer constitute a majority
in America. As a result, Black/Brown relations--and the need for
this relationship to be fruitful and mutually supportive--take on
an even greater urgency. Yet, this relationship has been troubled,
characterized too often by a misguided sense of competitiveness,
hostility, and even violence, as evidenced by the Miami race riots
of the 1980s.
In this brief, accessible, impassioned volume, Bill Piatt
surveys Black/Brownrelations in their entirety, devoting chapters
to such issues as competition in a shrinking labor market, the
re-segregation of our public schools, the language barrier, gang
warfare, and voting coalitions. Reviewing similarities and
differences between the Black and Brown experience in America, Bill
Piatt emphasizes the need for solidarity and mutual understanding
and offers explicit proposals for greater racial harmony. Blacks
and Browns must get along not only for their sake, he argues, but
for a stronger, more stable America.
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