Black Political Mobilization, Leadership, Power and Mass Behavior

By Minion K. C. Morrison

Subjects: African American Studies
Series: SUNY series in African American Studies
Paperback : 9780887065163, 324 pages, August 1987
Hardcover : 9780887065156, 324 pages, August 1987

Alternative formats available from:

Table of contents

List of Figures and Tables
Preface
1. The American Political System and Mobilization Politics
2. Black and White in the Southern Regional Context
3. Neo-Populism in Bolton
4. Heroine in Mayersville
5. Agrarian Townsman in Tchula
6. The Electorates: Politics, Economics and Ideology
7. The Political Economy of Rural Black-American Mobilization
8. Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Description

Black Political Mobilization accounts for the political success of black Americans in the South. Minion Morrison returns to Mississippi, the center of much of the political activism of the 1960s, to analyze the remarkable improvement in black electoral participation in the years following passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Mississippi's substantial black population has experienced marked electoral success despite a history of strict racial exclusion. The dramatic and widespread nature of mobilization there makes it one of the most illustrative case studies for exploring this period of political change in America. Mississippi represents a broader phenomenon of political change that sustains a new leadership class in the Southern region.

Three rural Mississippi towns serve as the focal point for the study. They each have a population of under 2,000, have overwhelming Afro-American voting majorities, are poor and largely agricultural, have been affected by the civil rights movement of the '60s, and have elected a black mayor since 1973. The towns are prime examples of the character and process of minority electoral politics and mobilization in the rural South: A new class of black leaders is nurtured and installed in office in an environment where a newly and highly mobilized constituency takes advantage of its majority status in the electorate.

This book combines good theory with lively interviews and rich case histories to highlight an essentially new variety of participatory democracy in American politics and government.

Minion K. C. Morrison is Associate Professor of Afro-American Studies and Political Science and Chairman of the Afro-American Studies Department at Syracuse University.