Black-Latino Coalitions in New York City from Protest to Public Office
To save 30%, add the book to your shopping cart, and enter code OPIUPS in the "Coupon Code" field at check out.* The e-book of Upsetting the Apple Cart is available wherever e-books are sold! Frederick Douglass Opie recounts and analyzes the history of black-Latino coalitions in New York City from 1959 to 1989. In those years, African American and Latino Progressives organized, mobilized, and transformed neighborhoods, workplaces, university campuses, and representative government in the nation's urban capital. Upsetting the Apple Cart makes new contributions to our understanding of protest movements and strikes in the 1960s and 1970s. Frederick Douglass Opie provides a social history of black and Latino working-class collaboration in shared living and work spaces and exposes racist suspicion and divisive jockeying among elites in political clubs and anti-poverty programs. He ultimately offers a different interpretation of the story of the labor, student, civil rights, and Black Power movements than has been traditionally told. Read more... Columbia History of Urban Life $30.00 $21.00 Use discount code OPIUPS at check-out
Cloth | 312 pages | 28 illus. | £20.50* |
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Keep a civil tongue.