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Segregation and Common Sense

Segregation and Common Sense

ByO. R. Williams, Sr.

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A history of racial intermarriage and race-mixing (miscegenation), with various arguments against it. Presents forced integration as slavery. This book was privately published at the dawn of the Civil Rights Movement (1961), just a few years prior to Loving v. Virginia, and just after the desegregation decision of May 17th, 1954. While being a little-known title, it is historically note-worthy. * Contains a biblical, historical, and geographical overview of intermarriage and miscegenation. * Contains a cogent explanation of the "Freedom of Association" argument. * Contains rare quotes from Communist and Zionist sources. * Is fully cited and includes Scripture references. This work will challenge some readers. It represents a minority opinion, obviously. These views did not prevail in society. They are nonetheless important to study to understand the complex social panorama of race- relations, and how they have been framed from the Antebellum period, through Emancipation, and into the events of the 1950s and 1960s. This is an exact reproduction of an original held at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. [89058601675] Original from Forum Pub. Co., Boston. [1961] Reprinted for Academic use. Suitable for African-American Studies, and US History Courses. Cited in Michigan Law Review, Volume 101, Issue 3, 2002, 789.

Details

Publication Date
Mar 29, 2022
Language
English
ISBN
9781458316691
Category
History
Copyright
All Rights Reserved - Standard Copyright License
Contributors
By (author): O. R. Williams, Sr.

Specifications

Pages
217
Binding Type
Paperback Perfect Bound
Interior Color
Black & White
Dimensions
Digest (5.5 x 8.5 in / 140 x 216 mm)

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