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Defining the Peace: World War II Veterans, Race, and the Remaking of Southern Political Tradition - Hardcover

 
9780807829110: Defining the Peace: World War II Veterans, Race, and the Remaking of Southern Political Tradition
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In the aftermath of World War II, Georgia's veterans--black, white, liberal, reactionary, pro-union, and anti-union--all found that service in the war enhanced their sense of male, political, and racial identity, but often in contradictory ways. In Defining the Peace, Jennifer E. Brooks shows how veterans competed in a protracted and sometimes violent struggle to determine the complex character of Georgia's postwar future.

Brooks finds that veterans shaped the key events of the era, including the gubernatorial campaigns of both Eugene Talmadge and Herman Talmadge, the defeat of entrenched political machines in Augusta and Savannah, the terrorism perpetrated against black citizens, the CIO's drive to organize the textile South, and the controversies that dominated the 1947 Georgia General Assembly. Progressive black and white veterans forged new grassroots networks to mobilize voters against racial and economic conservatives who opposed their vision of a democratic South. Most white veterans, however, opted to support candidates who favored a conservative program of modernization that aimed to alter the state's economic landscape while sustaining its anti-union and racial traditions.

As Brooks demonstrates, World War II veterans played a pivotal role in shaping the war's political impact on the South, generating a politics of race, anti-unionism, and modernization that stood as the war's most lasting political legacy.

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Book Description:
"Brooks adds to a still emerging body of literature on the effects of local leaders to affect political, racial, and economic change after WWII. . . . Recommended."-- Choice
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Brooks studies the competing efforts of black and white WW II veterans in Georgia, as they worked to shape postwar politics. Black veterans forged new grassroots networks to mobilize against candidates who opposed their vision of racial equality; reactionary white veterans, in turn, organized to support candidates who curbed openings toward greater equality in favor of a conservative, economically driven vision of modernization in the South.

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9780807855782: Defining the Peace: World War II Veterans, Race, and the Remaking of Southern Political Tradition: World War II Veterans, Race, and the Remaking of Southern Political Tradition

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ISBN 10:  ISBN 13:  9780807855782
Publisher: The University of North Carolina..., 2004
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Brooks, Jennifer E.
ISBN 10: 0807829110 ISBN 13: 9780807829110
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Book Description Condition: Brand New. In the aftermath of World War II, Georgia's veterans all found that service in the war enhanced their sense of male, political, and racial identity, but often in contradictory ways. Jennifer E. Brooks shows how veterans competed in a protracted and sometimes violent struggle to determine the complex character of Georgia's postwar future. Seller Inventory # 85252

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