American Pogroms : How Forgotten Massacres Shape America

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American Pogroms : How Forgotten Massacres Shape America

  • 著者名:Byman, Daniel
  • 価格 ¥3,362 (本体¥3,057)
  • Oxford University Press(2026/07/01発売)
  • 向夏の候!Kinoppy 電子書籍・電子洋書 全点ポイント30倍キャンペーン(~6/28)
  • ポイント 900pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780197788769
  • eISBN:9780197788783

ファイル: /

Description

Amidst heightened rhetoric and increasing polarization in the United States, American Pogroms chronicles the causes and consequences of two centuries of mob violence in American history, highlighting exactly what's at stake when we allow leaders to legitimate violence and the mob to rule. For much of American history, members of the majority population of the United States indiscriminately attacked and terrorized minority communities. In some parts of the country, mob violence seemed a near-constant part of the region's history, while in others it was a brief, horrific spasm that perpetrators--but not victims--quickly forgot. In American Pogroms, terrorism expert Daniel Byman argues that there is a word for this type of communal violence: pogrom. Although pogroms are historically associated with the orchestrated campaigns of anti-Jewish violence in Tsarist Russia, Byman asserts that pogroms have been an all-too-frequent feature of American history. Tracing two centuries of communal violence, Byman recounts cases of attacks against American religious minorities such as Catholics and Mormons, the killing of thousands of ethnic Mexicans in Texas, the murder and wholesale expulsion of Chinese workers from the American West, and the repeated attacks on the Black community that killed thousands and enabled decades of brutal discrimination. In all these cases, pogroms helped cement a system of injustice that left religious, ethnic, and racial minorities politically and economically marginalized. While the idea of mob violence now strikes most Americans as unthinkable, Byman warns that increased polarization and selective news consumption in recent years has coarsened discourse and legitimized violence, raising the risk that at least some violence will return.A broad-ranging synthesis of how and why majorities have so frequently resorted to community-level violence to restore or cement their power, American Pogroms illustrates the outsized role of violence in U.S. history and how it shapes the country today.

Table of Contents

Introduction1. The Mormon Wars2. Saying No to "Popery"3. Civil War in the City: The New York Draft Riots4. "A Terrorist Arm of the Democratic Party": The Failure of Reconstruction5. The Chinese Must Go6. "This Is a White Man's Country": The Wilmington Coup7. Border Wars in Texas (1910-1919)8. "If We Must Die": Racial Violence in the Early 20th Century9. Bloodshed in the Magic City10. Causes, Conduct, and Consequences of Pogroms11. Conclusion: A Better Country12. Epilogue: Could Pogroms Return?AcknowledgmentsAppendix: A Map of HateNotesIndex

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