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About the Author

David R. Roediger is the Foundation Professor of American Studies at University of Kansas. The author of The Wages of Whiteness, among other books, he lives in Lawrence, KS.
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Works by David R. Roediger

Black on White: Black Writers on What It Means to Be White (1998) — Editor — 129 copies, 2 reviews
Class, Race, and Marxism (2017) 116 copies
Haymarket Scrapbook (1986) 44 copies
History Against Misery (2006) 15 copies

Associated Works

John Brown (1962) — Editor, some editions — 348 copies, 4 reviews
Encyclopedia of the American Left (1990) — Contributor, some editions — 119 copies
Critical White Studies: Looking Behind the Mirror (1997) — Contributor — 64 copies
Treason to Whiteness Is Loyalty to Humanity (2022) — Foreword — 54 copies
Here to Stay, Here to Fight: A Race Today Anthology (2019) — Contributor — 17 copies
The Famous Speeches of the Eight Chicago Anarchists (Working Classics) (2025) — Foreword, some editions — 16 copies
Race Traitor 10 (1999) — Contributor — 4 copies
Race Traitor 4 (1995) — Contributor — 3 copies

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Common Knowledge

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Reviews

15 reviews
Taking hold of freedom with both hands

Seizing Freedom: Slave Emancipation and Liberty for All by David Roediger (Verso, $26.95).

David Roediger, a history professor at Kansas University, is an expert on American labor history and the persistence of racism. His latest, Seizing Freedom: Slave Emancipation and Liberty for All, is the second major historical work this year to address the agency exhibited by enslaved people as they struggled to free themselves.

“Self-emancipation”—also show more covered in David Williams’ I Freed Myself: African American Self-Emancipation in the Civil War Era—goes a long way toward de-bunking the myth that African Americans waited patiently in chains for white people to decide they should be free.

This offers us a very different view of what it meant to be black in America in the post-Civil War years; Roediger goes farther, to examine how other groups—women seeking suffrage, laborers seeking better working conditions—also worked for their own benefit during this period.

It was an age of self-advocacy. Apparently, no one expected wealthy white men to hand them anything, which is a good thing. Of course, that doesn’t mean it was an easy road, and Roediger also analyzes the institutional barriers to attaining liberty in a capitalist society that takes advantage of racism and sexism to further the aims of the ultra-wealthy.

Reviewed on Lit/Rant: www.litrant.tumblr.com
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½
The title essay is an essay I'd recommend in lieu of certain popular books about whiteness; though it references a specific historical moment I don't know much about (and I would love to know more!) it really cuts down to the heart of whiteness-as-violence and how we must be anti-white in our anti-racist movements. The other essays are maybe of less interest to folks who are not labor historians, and some of the reflective work on labor historiography was not super interesting to me, though show more it does mean I know I have a lot more reading to do. But there was also stuff in other essays I love--white communists trying and failing, mostly, and some fascinating looks at the construction of whiteness in the United States.

That opening essay though really turned kicked my butt and I want everyone to read it so pick this up even just for that!
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A collection of short classics on the narrow but interesting topic of just what is it with these white people anyway. The book provides a nice introduction to the work of a great number of excellent African American writers, so it is a good starting place for anyone interested in beginning a journey into African American thought and literature.

Read this book, and if you find, for example, that you like Derrick Bell's essay on whiteness as property, well, then you can look a bit further and show more read his books on the history of the civil rights movements, gospel choirs, or Brown v. Board of Education. Or, if you've only read Toni Morrison's fiction, you may enjoy beginning to explore her other work with the excerpt from her book Playing in the Dark.

But even if Black on White weren't a good place to begin exploring literature, it would be worth your time, and here's why: the idea of race has largely been defined and explicated by the people who have the most opportunity for expression: white people. An analysis of what whiteness is, what it means, how it works, and what it's for -- but one conceived and written by Black people -- is bound to be fresh and interesting.

So, if you think racism and the idea of race definitions are wrong, or even if you aren't angry about it, but you do think it's a bit silly, then take a few hours to consider what Black people have to say about whiteness.

(Unfortunately, Black on White has no index or other supplemental endmatter.)
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A spirited attempt to capture Fred's spirit and stories. I knew Fred at-least as well as this Editor, and was suprised at his omission, or possible complete ignoraance, of some of the classic Fred stories. O well, academic radicals are . . . well, academic radicals. Meanwhile, in the words of his old pal, the Wobbly soapboxer Frank Cedervall, Fred himself had, though he never went to college, a PhD in Revolutionary Science. Not to be too shamelessly self-promoting, there are anecdotes about show more Fred in my own HARMONY JUNCTION, listed on LibraryThing. show less

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Rating
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ISBNs
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