[lbo-talk] The Fire Last Time

Dorene Cornwell dorenefc at gmail.com
Sun Feb 22 18:02:10 PST 2009


Annual riots? Say more.

Bear in mind, I was not yet 7 when King was shot, living in the part of the country where, true story, Condolezza Rice's family fled to from the south, bear in mind, I was getting my news and analysis from Huntley and Brinkley and my parents who would have been pretty out of their depth, Bear in mind, if the current sitting president wasn't in Indonesia or somewhere, he was probably in about the same boat.

In other words, I don't care if some of you feel old, this is the first I have learned of any of it, and given the fetishization of many MLK celebrations, it seems really apt to get this stuff into the picture.

DoreneC

On Sun, Feb 22, 2009 at 12:38 PM, Mark Bennett <bennett.mab at gmail.com>wrote:


> >From McLemee's email interview:
>
> "It's hard to imagine today, but King was a very controversial figure at
> the
> time of his death — not only was he still opposed by millions of racist and
> bigoted whites, but his turn toward antiwar and prolabor activism in 1967
> and 1968 distanced him from many racial moderates and liberals as well.
> And,
> sadly, the civil rights movement had to work hard to distance itself from
> the annual riots of the mid- to late 1960s, which many Americans felt was a
> direct consequence of black activism. Not surprisingly, then, the urge over
> the last 40 years has been to memorialize Martin Luther King's life, which
> almost by necessity excludes a discussion of the rather ironic violence
> that
> followed his death."
>
> God, you know you're getting old when statements such as this start showing
> up in learned academic exchanges and are no longer simple common knowledge.
> "Controversial"? MLK was utterly *despised* by "The Silent Majority" of
> the day. I recall my parents, card-carrying members of TSM, saying the
> only
> reason they hoped that MLK didn't get assassinated is because he would be
> considered martyr by many blacks and the very riots that McLemee has
> studied
> would break out. Time moves on, I suppose.
>
> On Sun, Feb 22, 2009 at 9:52 AM, Shane Taylor <shane.taylor at verizon.net
> >wrote:
>
> > ["The Fire Last Time", by Scott McLemee:]
> >
> > In the wake of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination on April 4, 1968, a
> > wave of riots erupted throughout the United States — leading to the
> > occupation of Baltimore, Chicago, and the District of Columbia by federal
> > troops and the mobilization of the National Guard in a dozen more. The
> > violence lasted for a week. Clay Risen gives some numbers in the opening
> > pages of A Nation on Fire: America in the Wake of the King Assassination,
> > just published by John Wiley & Sons: "39 people were dead, more than
> 2,600
> > were injured, and 21,000 had been arrested. The damages were estimated at
> > $65 million—about $385 million today."
> >
> > But when Risen, the managing editor of the journal Democracy: A Journal
> of
> > Ideas, told people he was working on a book about the '68 riots, he says
> > they often assumed he meant the police melee at the Democratic national
> > convention in Chicago a few months later. The post-assassination upheaval
>
> > which engulfed more than 100 cities — gets a brief nod in accounts of the
> > Sixties, of course; yet the details remain vague, as if our historical
> > memory had somehow erased most of them. Drawing on contemporary accounts,
> > government reports, interviews, and archival sources, Risen presents a
> > narrative history of some of the events of that catastrophic week.
> >
> > "A race war did in fact come to America that day," he writes, "but it
> > turned out to be a cold war, not a hot one. When the smoke cleared and
> the
> > sirens ran down, an invisible wall went up between urban and suburban
> > America, every bit as real as the one in Berlin.... In the worlds of
> legal
> > theorist Jonathan Simon, in the 40-year wake of the riots, 'Americans
> have
> > built a new civil and political order structured around the problem of
> > violent crime.'" But evidence suggests that the riots were hardly the
> work
> > of street thugs. "There was no 'typical' rioter," notes Risen, "but the
> > statistically average profile was better educated and more likely to be
> > employed than most people in the riot area....Such results underscore an
> > alternative theory of ghetto rioting: that it was at least as much an
> > expression of protopolitical anger as it was of opportunism and common
> > criminality."
> >
> > With its emphasis on the political logic of racial backlash, A Nation on
> > Fire shares themes with Rick Perlstein's Nixonland — but it also seems
> > strangely contemporary at a time when fresh surges of "protopolitical
> anger"
> > are in the air, worldwide. (Street demonstrations have just toppled the
> > government in Iceland, for example.) Risen agreed to answer a series of
> > questions about his book by e-mail. A transcript of our exchange follows.
> >
> > <http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2009/01/28/mclemee>
> >
> >
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