Popular Justice A History of Lynching in America
by Berg, ManfredRent Textbook
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Summary
Table of Contents
| Preface | p. ix |
| The Roots of Lynching in Colonial and Revolutionary North America | p. 3 |
| Criminal justice and the death penalty in colonial North America and early modern Europe | |
| The death penalty as a communal ritual of retribution | |
| The punishment of slaves | |
| Slavery's legacy for the history of lynching | |
| The Paxton Massacre | |
| The Regulator Movement | |
| Mobs as instruments of law enforcement | |
| Mob action in the American Revolution | |
| Colonel Charles Lynch of Virginia in the War of Independence | |
| The Rise of Lynch Law in Antebellum America | p. 23 |
| The 1830s wave of mob violence | |
| Modernization in the antebellum era | |
| Jacksonian democracy | |
| The lynching of the Vicksburg gamblers | |
| Southern honor and violence | |
| The rise of militant pro-slavery | |
| Anti-abolitionist mob violence | |
| Insurrection panics | |
| Slavery, rape, and criminal justice in the South | |
| The lynching of alleged black Criminals | |
| Anti-slavery violence in the North | |
| Frontier Justice | p. 45 |
| The frontier theory of lynching | |
| Vigilante justice in the early nineteenth century | |
| Violence and vigilantism in the trans-Mississippi West | |
| Anti-Mexican violence during the California Gold Rush | |
| The 1851 and 1856 San Francisco vigilance committees | |
| Lynching in the Rocky Mountains region | |
| The Colorado people's court | |
| The lynching of cattle rustlers | |
| Public approval of frontier justice | |
| Hubert Bancroft's Popular Tribunals | |
| Lynching, Riots, and Political Terror in the Civil War Years | p. 69 |
| The New York draft riots | |
| The Great Hanging at Gainesville, Texas | |
| The weakening of slavery during the Civil War | |
| The lynching of Saxe Joiner | |
| Southern white fears after emancipation | |
| Race and Reconstruction | |
| The Ku Klux Klan | |
| Rape and racism | |
| Northern reactions to Klan terrorism | |
| Redemption | |
| The cultural legacy of Reconstruction mob violence | |
| ôIndescribable Barbarismö: The Lynching of African Americans in the Age of Jim Crow | p. 90 |
| The lynching of Henry Smith in Paris, Texas | |
| Lynch law as racist terrorism in the Jim Crow South. | |
| Populism | |
| The rape myth | |
| Lynching as punishment for black-on-white murder | |
| Planter paternalism | |
| The lynching of Jesse Washington in Waco, Texas | |
| Elite participants in lynch mobs | |
| White women as perpetrators and apologists | |
| Black women as lynch victims | |
| The lynching of blacks in the North | |
| Black resistance and self-defense | |
| Black-on-black lynchings | |
| Popular Justice Beyond Black and White | p. 117 |
| The lynching of Mexicans | |
| Native Americans as lynch victims | |
| Mob violence against Chinese immigrants | |
| The lynching of Italians | |
| The Leo Frank affair | |
| The lynching of Robert Prager | |
| Popular justice against white criminals | |
| White women as lynch victims | |
| The 1933 dual lynching in San Jose, California | |
| The Struggle Against Lynching | p. 144 |
| Lynching declines in the early twentieth century | |
| The Claude Neal lynching | |
| African Americans organize | |
| Southern white opposition to lynch law | |
| The scientific study of Lynching | |
| Shaming the American people | |
| The quest for anti-lynching legislation | |
| Southern sheriffs and the prevention of lynching | |
| The death penalty as a substitute for lynching | |
| Legal lynchings | |
| From Lynching to Hate Crime | p. 165 |
| Lynching goes underground | |
| Racial change in the World War II years | |
| The quadruple slaying in Monroe, Georgia | |
| The lynching of Willie Earle | |
| The Emmett Till case | |
| The lynching of Charles ôMackö Parker | |
| Racist terrorism against civil rights workers | |
| The murder of Michael Donald | |
| Hate crime legislation | |
| Lynching as metaphor | |
| Lynching in American Memory and Culture | p. 186 |
| The 2005 Senate apology | |
| ôWithout Sanctuary ö | |
| Compensation for victims of racial violence | |
| Reopening criminal investigations | |
| The fragmented memory of lynching | |
| Holocaust analogy | |
| The death penalty as a legacy of lynching | |
| The endurance of the vigilante tradition | |
| A Note on Sources | p. 199 |
| Index | p. 207 |
| About the Author | p. 213 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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