Picture of author.

For other authors named Jacqueline Jones, see the disambiguation page.

15+ Works 779 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Jacqueline Jones is the Walter Prescott Webb Chair in History and Ideas and the Mastin Gentry White Professor of Southern History at the University of Texas at Austin. The author of Saving Savannah, American Work, and The Dispossessed, she lives in Austin, Texas.
Image credit: Larry D. Moore

Works by Jacqueline Jones

Associated Works

Women's America: Refocusing the Past (1982) — Contributor, some editions — 333 copies
Critical White Studies: Looking Behind the Mirror (1997) — Contributor — 57 copies
Women, Politics, and Change (1990) — Contributor — 12 copies
Slavery and Freedom in Savannah (2014) — Contributor — 10 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1948-06-17
Gender
female
Nationality
USA

Members

Reviews

Jacqueline Jones’ Goddess of Anarchy is an exploration of the life and times of a fascinating figure: Lucy Parsons, a formerly enslaved woman from the U.S. South who married a former Confederate soldier in the 1870s. Their married life was as distinctive as their marriage: they moved to Chicago where they became involved first with the socialist movement and then with anarchists, learning German in order to better communicate with the large number of German immigrants who were involved in these leftist politics. Parsons’ husband was executed after the Haymarket bombing of 1886, but she continued her career as a prolific writer and speaker on matters of anarchism, free speech, and workers’ rights.

Jones’ portrait of Parsons shows her to have been a complex person: she had rigorous convictions and passionate intelligence, but she was abrasive and hypocritical (she vociferously critiqued fellow anarchist Emma Goldman’s advocacy of free love while herself engaging in multiple extra-marital relationships). Despite her public embrace of traditional gender roles and her promotion of herself as a sorrowful widow and doting mother, she had her son forceably committed to an insane asylum for the rest of his life and seems to have never visited him there once. Parsons gave fiery speeches in support of workers’ rights but determinedly ignored the needs of Black workers and vehemently denied her own racial identity.

There’s much to grapple with here in terms of Parsons’ legacy, and how to balance an admiration for her activism and her critique of respectability politics with a critique of how she could often tip over the line of being an ideologue. How do we fairly provide an accounting of the career of a Black woman who was courageous and forthright but not ultimately particularly likeable? It’s a thorny question. Jones, I think, is even-handed in her assessment of Parson, her life, and her career.
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
siriaeve | 2 other reviews | Nov 11, 2022 |
BIOGRAPHY/HISTORY
Jacqueline Jones
Goddess of Anarchy: The Life and Times of Lucy Parsons, American Radical
Basic Books
Hardcover, 978-0-4650-7899-8, (also available as an e-book, an audiobook, and on audio CD), 480 pgs., $32.00
December 2017

Lucy Parsons. Slave, freedwoman, student, wife, mother, writer, editor, internationally renowned orator, socialist, communist, anarchist, cipher. From her birth to a slave in antebellum Virginia in 1851, to her education and formative years in Reconstruction–era Waco, Texas, where she married Albert Parsons, an Anglo man who would later be hanged in connection with the bombing of Haymarket Square, to swiftly industrializing Chicago in the Gilded Age, until her death in 1942, Parsons fought for the laboring masses, freedom of speech, and freedom of assembly in a nation dizzy with change, a nation sometimes exalted by rapid innovation, oftentimes staggering beneath it. From the 1880s until the day she died, Parsons “held fast to the ideal of a nonhierarchical society emerging from trade unions, a society without wages and without coercive government of any kind.” Even if this result could be achieved only by dynamite.

Goddess of Anarchy: The Life and Times of Lucy Parsons, American Radical is the latest work of biographical history from Jacqueline Jones, professor of history at the University of Texas at Austin, MacArthur Fellow, two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, and winner of the Bancroft Prize. Goddess of Anarchy is a dramatic and entertaining account of a difficult, complicated, and flawed but significant life almost lost to history, as are those of untold numbers of impactful women.

Goddess of Anarchy recounts much of the history of the labor struggle in the United States as told through the prism of Lucy Parsons’s singular, startling life. The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 was the catalyst for a receptive Parsons to devote her life to “the labor question” and convince her that the two-party system of Republicans and Democrats would always fail the great unwashed in order to remain in power at all costs. Believing the ballot a failure, Parsons advocated bullets.

Parsons’s contemporaries included Mother Jones, Emma Goldman, Eugene V. Debs, Samuel Gompers, and Jane Addams, with all of whom she feuded. Many of her peers thought she harmed the cause by denigrating voting and unions. When Progressivism arrived, Parsons decried charity as “hush money to hide the blushes of the labor robbers.” She thought the New Deal and FDR co-opted the movement.

Though she lived in the public eye for almost seven decades, Parsons went to great pains to veil her African origins and personal life. Parsons “expressed a deep commitment to informed debate and disquisition,” Jones writes, but in the next breath would invoke “the virtues of explosive devices.” As she states in her introduction, Jones intends a “more nuanced approach by integrating Parsons’s secret private life with her high-profile public persona.” I don’t think integration was achieved, and I doubt it possible to reconcile the contradictions of a person exceedingly talented at compartmentalization.

The most pressing issues of Parsons’s lifetime remain so in ours, a circumstance which is either wholly depressing or indicates there is truly nothing new under the sun, or both. The two-party system failed to work for the poor; technology displaced workers; the middle class eroded; money and influence corrupted elections and public policy; a “new iteration of the KKK indicated that the more the pace of technological innovation accelerated, the more likely it became that a significant portion of the white laboring classes would seek refuge in a narrow tribalism.”

Jones’s writing has a vitality to it as she explores Parsons’s many contradictions, offers psychological insights, and tartly makes her points. Jones is a master of the concise introductory paragraph and the concluding paragraph that simultaneously foreshadows and whets the appetite for the next chapter. Goddess of Anarchy is an education and a bravura performance from a stylish wordsmith.

Originally published in Lone Star Literary Life.
… (more)
 
Flagged
TexasBookLover | 2 other reviews | Jun 18, 2018 |
An historian’s Life & Times of Lucy Parsons, the wife then widow of executed Haymarket provocateur (and former Confederate officer) Albert Parsons. Jones’ work reveals little-known aspects of Lucy’s life, from her slave childhood in Virginia to her persistent claims of Mexican and Native American ethnicity, her avoidance of civil rights issues in favor of anarcho-syndicalist labor agitation, and the challenges she faced as a mother and radical firebrand. The best bits of Goddess of Anarchy evoke Reconstruction-era McLennan County in Central Texas—where the Parsons met and married, black voters outnumbered white voters, and progressive racial policies seemed to preface a real democratic future, and Gilded-Age Chicago—where the Parsons rallied the mostly-immigrant radical unions against ‘wage slavery’ and taunted police and politicians with calls for ‘propaganda by the deed.’… (more)
½
 
Flagged
HectorSwell | 2 other reviews | Apr 6, 2018 |
It's interesting to read a Civil War book about a place that never experienced a battle during the war. Savannah remained far from the fighting until the end of Sherman's march through Georgia and, when he finally arrived, the mayor surrendered the city rather than have it suffer Atlanta's fate. And, yet, the war touched the city substantially. It is a port city and, before the war, a portal of escape for slaves seeking to reach the North...and for their return to the South under the Fugitive Slave Acts. Once the war got underway, the city's lifeblood of trade was slowly squeezed off by Union blockades and the white elite struggled to preserve their way of life as they slid toward bankruptcy. After the war's end, it lay in the heart of the large coastal plantations that were broken apart into homesteads for the newly freed from all over Georgia and even the Carolinas.

Where books like Battle Cry of Freedom or Team of Rivals give you a perspective from above, looking down upon the mass movements of armies and political currents, Saving Savannah brings you to the Civil War from the opposite direction. The stories are personal: a slave's attempts to escape to Boston, a blacksmith's family trying to make ends meet despite being stripped of possessions by both Southerners and Northerners, a teacher's attempts to provide education for the black children, the struggles of local politicians on either side of both the secession and the slavery debates. It gives immediacy to the conflict that is a refreshing change from the Grand Sweep of History approach.

Surprisingly, only half the book is devoted to the antebellum period and the Civil War, itself. The remainder of the book covers the aftermath of the war: both the determination of the ruling elite to perpetuate as much of the class imbalance as they could by any means up to and including violence, and the growing infidelity of the Federal government to the concept of racial equality that allowed that imbalance to continue.

Though this story is focused on a single city, it's a fascinating picture of a culture trying desperately to preserve its core even while its outward form is forced to change. From the poll taxes of the 1870s that kept blacks from voting to the 24th Amendment that (partially) abolished them in 1964, from attempts to bust segregated streetcars in the 1880s to Rosa Parks doing the same in 1955, Jones gives us a picture that shows our history to be a continuous stream, not a disjointed Then and Now.
… (more)
½
9 vote
Flagged
TadAD | May 5, 2011 |

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
15
Also by
6
Members
779
Popularity
#32,680
Rating
3.9
Reviews
5
ISBNs
64

Charts & Graphs