72 pages 2 hours read

Douglas A. Blackmon

Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2008

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Themes

Individual Decisions and Beliefs Produced Slavery

A core theme that Blackmon explores in his book is how racism and black oppression following the Civil War was not an inevitable sociological force but a series of individual, conscious decisions. The primary examples used were white judges and law enforcement officers who cooperated with white businessmen to create the forced labor system. Local officers like Francis M. Pruitt chose to arrest black men on fraudulent charges. Justices of the peace, like Jesse London, agreed to preside over false charges. And, of course, white businessmen chose to buy or lease convicted black men and abuse them. These decisions added up to further establish white Southerners’ belief that “a resubjugation of African Americans was an acceptable—even essential—element of solving the ‘Negro question’“ (53).

Ironically, the decisions of white Northerners and somewhat progressive Southerners also contributed to neo-slavery. After all, without the demand for economic profit, there would have been no need for slaves. Northerner investors financed several Southern businesses that utilized forced labor, despite the North’s alleged support of black people’s rights. Judge Jones, an apparent progressive, caved to white anger during the slavery trials and ruled that white man could enter into exploitative contracts with convicted black men as long as a local judge approved it.