|
Blacks, Jews, and Civil Rights Law in New York, 1895–1913
EVAN FRISS
THE CURRENT HISTORICAL discourse
concerning blacks and Jews focuses largely on the fluctuating inter-group
relationships and perceptions of the two communities in the post-World
War II period. Specifically, the fight for civil rights has garnered the
most attention among scholars, who have detailed the roles that blacks
and Jews played in the 1950s–1960s civil rights movement. Nevertheless,
exceptional scholarly work regarding earlier civil rights battles remains
conspicuously absent from historical literature, despite the fact that
blacks and Jews, often finding themselves at the mercy of prejudiced proprietors,
waged civil rights campaigns in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries.
|
|