Following the Color Line


Lu par Roger Melin

(4.8 stars; 6 reviews)

Subtitled "An Account of Negro Citizenship in the American Democracy", we are presented an in-depth and essentially non-opinionated open view of race relations as they existed in the U.S. in 1908, more than 40 years following the end of the Civil War.

The book is in three parts: The Negro in the South; The Negro in the North; and the Negro in the Nation. We are presented both rural and urban points of view, struggles for survival, varying district relationships, the effect of lynching, power struggles, and political repercussions, among many other topics. - Summary by Roger Melin (14 hr 40 min)

Chapitres

Preface 3:36 Lu par Roger Melin
A Race Riot and After - part 1 32:11 Lu par Roger Melin
A Race Riot and After - part 2 35:16 Lu par Roger Melin
Following the Colour Line in the South: A superficial View of Conditions - part… 22:57 Lu par Roger Melin
Following the Colour Line in the South: A superficial View of Conditions - part… 30:32 Lu par Roger Melin
The Southern City Negro - part 1 34:02 Lu par Roger Melin
The Southern City Negro - part 2 27:45 Lu par Roger Melin
In the Black Belt: The Negro Farmer - part 1 31:55 Lu par Roger Melin
In the Black Belt: The Negro Farmer - part 2 29:33 Lu par Roger Melin
Race Relationships in the South - part 1 31:14 Lu par Roger Melin
Race Relationships in the South - part 2 25:17 Lu par Roger Melin
Following the Colour Line in the North - part 1 29:57 Lu par Roger Melin
Following the Colour Line in the North - part 2 29:11 Lu par Roger Melin
The Negroes’ Struggle for Survival in Northern Cities - part 1 31:18 Lu par Roger Melin
The Negroes’ Struggle for Survival in Northern Cities - part 2 21:48 Lu par Roger Melin
The Mulatto: The Problem of Race Mixture - part 1 32:19 Lu par Roger Melin
The Mulatto: The Problem of Race Mixture - part 2 39:26 Lu par Roger Melin
Lynching, South and North - part 1 1:03:33 Lu par Roger Melin
Lynching, South and North - part 2 57:38 Lu par Roger Melin
An Ostracised Race in Ferment: The Conflict of Negro Parties and Negro Leaders … 17:11 Lu par Roger Melin
An Ostracised Race in Ferment: The Conflict of Negro Parties and Negro Leaders … 32:56 Lu par Roger Melin
The Negro in Politics - part 1 31:22 Lu par Roger Melin
The Negro in Politics - part 2 24:32 Lu par Roger Melin
The Black Man’s Silent Power - part 1 30:32 Lu par Roger Melin
The Black Man’s Silent Power - part 2 23:43 Lu par Roger Melin
The New Southern Statesmanship - part 1 31:27 Lu par Roger Melin
The New Southern Statesmanship - part 2 31:16 Lu par Roger Melin
What to Do About the Negro—A Few Conclusions - part 1 26:56 Lu par Roger Melin
What to Do About the Negro—A Few Conclusions - part 2 21:14 Lu par Roger Melin

Critiques


(5 stars)

One of the best things I have ever read about the racial issues in America. Should be required reading for HS graduation. Though a lot of the language and concepts is dated, it will give you a sense of how people thought about blacks in the early 1900s. His opinion that if America doesn’t allow blacks to make their way without hindrance, it would suffer the consequences is spot on. Here we are 115 years after this was published still focused on race and more particularly reaping what we have sown among blacks and whites - 100s of millions of people with superior mindset and 40 million people with inferior mindset, and all of the negative consequences of that.