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A Life in red : : a Story of Forbidden Love, the Great Depression, and the Communist Fight for a Black Nation in the Deep South

Beasley, David, 1958- Book - 2015 Black Studies 335.43 Be 1 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 0 out of 5

Cover image for A life in red : : a story of forbidden love, the Great Depression, and the communist fight for a Black nation in the deep South

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Call Number: Black Studies 335.43 Be
On Shelf At: Downtown Library

Location & Checkout Length Call Number Checkout Length Item Status
Downtown 2nd Floor
4-week checkout
Black Studies 335.43 Be 4-week checkout On Shelf

Prologue -- The father -- Music from the air -- The Atlanta Six -- The greatest happiness -- P.O. Box 339 -- Sanity trial -- Back to Russia -- A native son -- Decimation -- The uprising -- Epilogue.
"The true story of star-crossed lovers Herbert Newton, a black communist seeking the end of an oppressive America, and Jane Newton, the white daughter of a wealthy American Legion commander, and their part in the Depression-Era, communist fight for a black sovereign nation. Readers will be introduced to a largely ignored piece of civil rights history that unfolded a quarter century before the mass protests that began in the 1950s. The Newtons' love story underscores the fraught times of a segregated and flailing country, while David Beasley's account of the movement's history creates a full and layered backdrop. Including the attempt to unionize Southern workers, the trial of the Atlanta Six, and other major turning points, the book explores communists' endeavor to utilize the black community's anger and oppression to fuel a deflated movement on American soil. Readers will experience a detailed picture of the friendship between the Newtons and Richard Wright, who wrote Native Son while living with the couple and struggling to find an identity outside of the communist party in New York City. In addition, A Life in Red covers the sanity trials Jane Newton underwent simply for being white, promoting communism, and marrying a black man; delves into The Scottsboro Trial as a crucial foundation for the communist movement's relationship with the African American community; and describes the intimate lives of both black and white communist members of the era trained in the United States and Russia"--Provided by publisher.

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