By Hands Now Known: Jim Crow's Legal Executioners

By Hands Now Known: Jim Crow's Legal Executioners

  • Downloads:3978
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-10-18 19:21:34
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Margaret A. Burnham
  • ISBN:B0BHPJ1XD2
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Reviews

Bruce

Want to know why CRT is needed? Want to know why we have to teach our children ALL of our history? read this book。

Karen

It took me a while to read this boom because I had the audiobook and listens while walking the dog。 I heard the author on NPR and knew I had to have it。 The book is revealing and comprehensive。 The book is well-researched。 I felt like the narrator struggled a bit with pronunciation of some words, but not a ton。 She was a bit “plodding,” though。

Mari Lewis

This was really well-researched and clearly articulated — a real challenge when working to illuminate lost histories across multiple disciplines。 Burnham does well to parse legal language and logics at work (and ignored) while shedding a light on atrocities overlooked in other accounts of Jim Crow and it’s after-effects。 The sections are broken down in a way that allows the book to slowly build, and the closing chapter on reparations was precise, forceful, and brilliant。 I’m very glad I read thi This was really well-researched and clearly articulated — a real challenge when working to illuminate lost histories across multiple disciplines。 Burnham does well to parse legal language and logics at work (and ignored) while shedding a light on atrocities overlooked in other accounts of Jim Crow and it’s after-effects。 The sections are broken down in a way that allows the book to slowly build, and the closing chapter on reparations was precise, forceful, and brilliant。 I’m very glad I read this, and it’s going immediately in my essential American History and Culture section; I cannot emphasize enough how well Burnham has presented academic content accessibly and engagingly, despite the challenges presented by working interdiciplinarily and shining a harsh light on terrible histories, largely yet to be acknowledged and reckoned with。 Along with a firm case for reparations, she stresses the need for official recognition of harm and apology:“Apology must be the norm, not the exception。 Not least of the reasons to apologize* is to honor those who did not survive the virulence of Jim Crow terror。 Their skeletal vestiges, often never properly interred, remain unattended, unmarked, and scattered across history’s terrain。 Apologies render them visible, urgent, and—despite the passage of time—still morally deserving。”*examples in the text: state representatives formally apologizing to descendants of those lost。A standout from the final full chapter for me:“The practice of immunizing the perpetrators of racial murder changes the fundamental structure of law。 It assigned an explicit racializing function to law and law enforcers。 Rather than working as public guardians of community safety, law enforcement officials operate as protectors of privilege。” 。。。more

Staci Suhy

I received this book for free as part of a first reads promotion。

Lillian

A deeper, truer history of Jim Crow, extensively researched and well written。 Literary, scholarly, inviting, and accessible。 Stories that are painful to read but important。

Catherine

This sounds like an important and deeply informed book。 I want to understand the harrowing subject more fully, and I'm grateful to have won it as a Goodreads Giveaway。 But the books were shipped in early August, and I never received my copy。 Could you please send it along? This sounds like an important and deeply informed book。 I want to understand the harrowing subject more fully, and I'm grateful to have won it as a Goodreads Giveaway。 But the books were shipped in early August, and I never received my copy。 Could you please send it along? 。。。more

Eva

(review copy from netgalley)This text examines the parts of Jim Crow laws and racialized crimes, in many cases murders, of Black Americans that were never reported, or would have been lost to history if not for some archival evidence。 The brutal murder that starts off the text is heart-breaking, of a sixty-something year-old Black woman in Donaldsonville who was holding a can of oil at a store。 The white shopkeeper told her to set it down and get out which she did。 He then followed her outside o (review copy from netgalley)This text examines the parts of Jim Crow laws and racialized crimes, in many cases murders, of Black Americans that were never reported, or would have been lost to history if not for some archival evidence。 The brutal murder that starts off the text is heart-breaking, of a sixty-something year-old Black woman in Donaldsonville who was holding a can of oil at a store。 The white shopkeeper told her to set it down and get out which she did。 He then followed her outside of the store and murdered her with an ax handle。 He was never held to account。 Too many people still think of Jim Crow laws an 'ancient history,' the author asserts。 "They may recognize the names Rosa Parks and Fred Shuttlesworth, and know something about lynching, but they likely have little sense of the quotidian violence that shaped routine experiences like grocery shopping and tied the nation's legal institutions to its racial culture。" As I write this, it's weeks after a white supremacist gunman opened fire in a grocery store in Buffalo, in a heinous hate crime that targeted Black shoppers, of whom he murdered several。 The fact that what happened to this woman in Donaldsonville still happens to this day, in 2022, is beyond abominable and I don't have words for it。 The other misunderstood/little understood area that the author wants to address is the myth that Jim Crow laws only operated in the South。 They very much operated, in many cases just as violently, in the North of the United States, and followed families who were fleeing from the worst of Jim Crow to places like the west coast and California。 It followed these Black families and populations wherever they went。 As the author asserts, "It was not so much tied to a geographical place [Jim Crow laws] as it was a national project, supported not just by the violence of 'the locals' but by a national legal system that endorsed and sustained a missionary commitment to a future of perpetual white rule。" These powerful, searing words serve as a reminder of the work and reckoning America still needs to do to reconcile with this part not only of its past but also its present。For readers who are not aware of other little-known atrocities of racialized violence, such as the Colfax massacre in Colfax, Louisiana on Easter Sunday 1873, this text will illuminate and fill out the gaps in knowledge for those wishing to know more。 In this case, although 97 members of the white mob were indicted under federal law, only 9 were charged。 If this sounds familiar it's because it should。。。the disproportionate amount of white perpetrators of racialized crimes overwhelmingly get not very much in the way of legal consequences, if at all, or if they do, they get reduced sentences。 Compare this to the overly high amounts of incarceration and criminalization of Black populations and the results are staggering。What happened to George Floyd was an extension of Jim Crow--the police officers who murdered him indeed performed a public execution in 2020, and it is not radical at all to say that it was a lynching。 Anyone who knows the deeper history and implications of lynchings also knows this to be true。 The author discusses significant cases such as that of Reverend A。H。 Hampton from the 1860s。 Any reader seeking to understand better the links of why transatlantic slavery and Jim Crow laws have continued to reverberate and are still issues that play out against Black Americans to this day needs to read this powerful, well-researched text。 Of particular interest, the author devotes much of the text to exploring several cases that occurred in Louisiana, the primary area of my research。Readers who also want to know more about the history of the NAACP and how they worked to fight against racialized violence will benefit from this text。 This book is so much more than segregated seating on buses and other forms of public transport, or vicious murders that happened and went unreported in many cases。 It also examines the ways the law was built to maximize punitive measures against Black Americans in the Reconstruction Era that are still in many ways in effect today。 As well, the book details forms of protest that Black populations engaged in and are now engaging in, particularly in Birmingham Alabama。 While everyone knows the name Emmett Till (or should), few have heard of Robert Sands, fifteen years old, who was shot in 1950 as he passed through a white neighborhood in Birmingham。 He died from his wounds。 There's also a section toward the end of the book that goes into the issue of reparations, and key considerations that must be taken into account。 。。。more