Lineaments of Wrath

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A01=James W. Clarke
Author_James W. Clarke
black
Black Farm Laborers
Black Homicide Rate
black subculture violence analysis
Boll Weevil
Bull Whip
Capital Punishment
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Category=JKV
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class
convict leasing system
criminology research
Debt Peonage
Edgefield District
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
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Fort Pillow Massacre
Freedmen's Bureau
Freedmen’s Bureau
Gangsta Rap Music
Lames W. Clarke
Large Families
Louisville Courier Journal
lower
Lower Class Black
Lower Class Black Males
lynching studies
males
Man's Fields
Man’s Fields
Nation's Homicides
Pruitt Igoe Public Housing Project
racial violence history
Snoop Doggy Dogg
social control theory
Sumter County
urban sociology
White Homicide Rates
White Law
White Man's Law
White Man's Nigger
White Man’s Law
White Man’s Nigger
Yo Mama
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765808738
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Aug 2001
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Violence has marked relations between blacks and whites in America for nearly four hundred years. In The Lineaments of Wrath, James W. Clarke draws upon behavioral science theory and primary historical evidence to examine and explain its causes and enduring consequences.

Beginning with slavery and concluding with the present, Clarke describes how the combined effects of state-sanctioned mob violence and the discriminatory administration of "race-blind" criminal and contract labor laws terrorized and immobilized the black population in the post-emancipation South. In this fashion an agricultural system, based on debt peonage and convict labor, quickly replaced slavery and remained the back-bone of the region's economy well into the twentieth century.

Quoting the actual words of victims and witnesses—from former slaves to "gangsta" rappers—Clarke documents the erosion of black confidence in American criminal justice. In so doing, he also traces the evolution, across many generations, of a black subculture of violence, in which disputes are settled personally, and without recourse to the legal system. That subculture, the author concludes, accounts for historically high rates of black-on-black violence which now threatens to destroy the black inner city from within. The Lineaments of Wrath puts America's race issues into a completely original historical perspective. Those in the fields of political science, sociology, history, psychology, public policy, race relations, and law will find Clarke's work of profound importance.

James W. Clarke is university distinguished professor of political science at the University of Arizona. He is the author of On Being Mad or Merely Angry. Last Rampage, and American Assassins.

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