The Nile on eBay Southern Enclosure by John H. Cable
Historians of the American South have come to consider the mechanization and consolidation of cotton farming - the 'Southern enclosure movement' - to be a watershed event in the region's history. This book is among the first studies to explore that process through the interpretive lens of settler colonialism.
FORMATHardcover CONDITIONBrand New Publisher Description
Historians of the American South have come to consider the mechanization and consolidation of cotton farming—the "Southern enclosure movement"—to be a watershed event in the region's history. In the decades after World War II, this transition pushed innumerable sharecroppers, tenant farmers, and smallholders off the land, redistributing territory and resources upward to a handful of large, mainly white operators. By disproportionately displacing Black farmers, enclosure also slowed the progress of the civil rights movement and limited its impact.John H. Cable's Southern Enclosure is among the first studies to explore that process through the interpretive lens of settler colonialism. Focusing on east-central Mississippi, home of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, Cable situates enclosure in the long history of dispossession that began with Indian Removal. The book follows elite white landowners and Black and Choctaw farmers from World War II to 1960—the period when the old, labor-intensive farm structure collapsed. By acknowledging that this process occurred on taken land, Cable demonstrates that the records of agricultural agents, segregationist politicians, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) are traces of ongoing colonization.The settler colonial framework, rarely associated with the postwar South, sheds important light on the shifting categories of race and class. It also prompts comparisons with other settler societies (states in southern and eastern Africa, for instance) whose timelines, racial regimes, and agrarian transitions were similar to those of the South. This postwar history of the South suggests ways in which the BIA's termination policy dovetailed with Southern segregationism and, at the same time, points to some of the shortcomings of the burgeoning field of settler colonial studies.
Author Biography
John H. Cable is assistant professor of history at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College in Tifton, Georgia.
Table of Contents
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Land, Labor, and Race in the Prewar Years2. Sea Change: Settler Agriculture after World War II3. Frantic Resistance: Mississippi and the Decolonial Zeitgeist4. Enclosure: Settler Agriculture in the 1950s5. Mississippi's 1960ConclusionNotesBibliographyIndex
Review
John Cable's framework centering the political economy of race as part of a larger movement of global decolonization puts Southern labor history in conversation with the literatures of political struggles for dignity and autonomy across a range of times and places. Challenging the biracial model of Southern history by applying a settler colonial model effectively connects the Southern struggle for civil rights with global decolonization in a new way, and Cable is the first to view this struggle through the lens of settler colonialism." - Katherine Osburn, associate professor emeritus of history at Arizona State University, and author of Choctaw Resurgence in Mississippi: Race, Class, and Nation Building in the Jim Crow South, 1830–1977"In superb and often arresting detail, John Cable recasts the post–World War II dispossession and displacement of Choctaw, African American, and poor white people in Mississippi as an instance of settler colonialism. By making substantive and expansive comparisons with white settlers in southern and eastern Africa, he convincingly connects the exploitative and extractive impulse of the white landowning elite in east central Mississippi with settlers throughout the colonial world. He pays equal attention to the powerful resistance of Choctaw and Black people that paralleled and sometimes drew inspiration from African decolonization movements." - Adrienne Petty, associate professor of history, College of William and Mary, and author of Standing Their Ground: Small Farmers in North Carolina Since the Civil War
Details ISBN0700635831 Author John H. Cable Pages 216 Publisher University Press of Kansas ISBN-13 9780700635832 Format Hardcover Imprint University Press of Kansas Subtitle Settler Colonialism and the Postwar Transformation of Mississippi Place of Publication Kansas Country of Publication United States AU Release Date 2023-11-16 NZ Release Date 2023-11-16 UK Release Date 2023-11-16 ISBN-10 0700635831 Audience Professional & Vocational DEWEY 333.709762 Year 2023 Publication Date 2023-12-31 US Release Date 2023-12-31 We've got this
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