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Women Riot for Jobs 女性为工作而暴动
Pub Date : 2018-11-19 DOI: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469646725.003.0005
M. Murphy
During the 1930s, many black women who had been engaged in national campaigns turned toward the economic crisis that was unfolding in the nation’s capital. The crisis of the Great Depression inspired activists to amplify their demands for economic justice, to argue that black women deserved the opportunity to work in a job of their choice, earn a living wage, provide for their families, and enjoy full participation in government programs that regulated hours and wages and provided a safety net in old age. Black women critiqued New Deal programs for marginalizing domestic workers, whether through their exclusion from the National Recovery Administration’s industrial codes, limited access to government relief programs, or their ineligibility to receive benefits from the Social Security Act. In 1938, 10,000 black women rioted for charwomen jobs in the federal government, which illustrated their desire for economic justice in the nation’s capital.
在20世纪30年代,许多参与全国性竞选活动的黑人妇女转向了正在国家首都展开的经济危机。大萧条的危机促使活动人士扩大了他们对经济正义的要求,他们认为黑人妇女应该有机会从事自己选择的工作,赚取生活工资,养家糊口,并充分参与政府计划,这些计划规定了工作时间和工资,并为老年提供了安全网。黑人妇女批评新政计划将家庭佣工边缘化,无论是因为他们被排除在国家复兴管理局的工业法规之外,获得政府救济计划的机会有限,还是因为他们没有资格获得《社会保障法》的福利。1938年,1万名黑人妇女为争取联邦政府的打杂工作而暴动,这表明她们渴望在美国首都获得经济公正。
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引用次数: 0
Jim Crow Must Go 吉姆·克劳必须消失
Pub Date : 2018-11-19 DOI: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469646725.003.0007
M. Murphy
Chapter Six illustrates how, during World War II, black women in Washington, D.C. worked to steer the city on a path toward racial integration. Women’s activism became more militant in the 1940s as they built on the rich tradition of resistance from the previous decade in economic justice, civil rights, and campaigns for safety. During World War II, black women protested interstate transportation segregation, staged sit-ins at lunch counters throughout the city, and returned to their position as lobbyists in the federal government. As men departed to fight in World War II, black women crafted gendered arguments, contending that it was their duty to fight for racial equality in the city. At the conclusion of World War II, black women had laid the foundation for the post-war black freedom struggle across the nation.
第六章讲述了二战期间,华盛顿特区的黑人妇女如何努力引导这座城市走上种族融合的道路。20世纪40年代,妇女的激进主义变得更加激进,因为她们继承了前十年在经济正义、民权和安全运动方面的丰富抵抗传统。在第二次世界大战期间,黑人妇女抗议州际交通隔离,在整个城市的午餐柜台举行静坐,并重新担任联邦政府的游说者。当男性参军参加第二次世界大战时,黑人女性提出了与性别有关的论点,她们辩称,在这个城市争取种族平等是她们的责任。在第二次世界大战结束时,黑人妇女为战后全国黑人自由斗争奠定了基础。
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引用次数: 0
The Eyes of the World Are upon Us 全世界的眼睛都在看着我们
Pub Date : 2018-11-19 DOI: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469646725.003.0003
M. Murphy
This chapter analyses how black women living in Washington, D.C. in the 1920s and early 1930s worked hard to pass a federal anti-lynching law. Over a period of fifteen years, women employed a range of protest tactics, including petitions, pickets, prayer meetings, congressional testimony, and a Silent Parade. The U.S. House of Representatives passed the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill in 1922, but it died in the Senate. Four years later, two women testified in the Senate about the urgency of passing anti-lynching legislation, which reflected the growing visibility of black women in politics. But when activists protested the erasure of lynching at the National Crime Conference in 1934, they recognized that police brutality in the nation’s capital needed to be a political priority. Many of the veterans of anti-lynching activism turned toward eradicating interracial police violence in Washington, D.C. in the 1930s.
本章分析了20世纪20年代和30年代初生活在华盛顿特区的黑人妇女如何努力通过联邦反私刑法。在15年的时间里,妇女们采用了一系列的抗议策略,包括请愿、纠察、祈祷会、国会证词和无声游行。1922年,美国众议院通过了《戴尔反私刑法案》,但在参议院被否决。四年后,两名女性在参议院作证,说明通过反私刑立法的紧迫性,这反映出黑人女性在政治上的知名度越来越高。但是,当活动人士在1934年的全国犯罪会议(National Crime Conference)上抗议废除私刑时,他们认识到,警察在首都的暴行需要成为政治上的优先事项。20世纪30年代,许多反对私刑的激进分子转向消除华盛顿特区的种族间警察暴力。
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引用次数: 0
Make Washington Safe for Negro Womanhood The Politics of Police Brutality 让华盛顿成为黑人女性的安全之地——警察暴行的政治
Pub Date : 2018-11-19 DOI: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469646725.003.0004
M. Murphy
This chapter chronicles patterns of racialized and gendered interracial police brutality in Washington, D.C. and the efforts of black women and men to end this violence. Between 1928 and 1938 white police officers in the city shot and killed forty black men in the city. While white officers did not shoot and kill black women and girls, but subjected at least twenty nine to a range of violent behaviors, including street harassment, racial epithets, physical assaults, and intrusions into their homes. In addition to these abusive encounters, white officers employed a double standard by refusing to conduct investigates when black women were abused, raped, or murdered; this was a form of negligence. Black women who were the victims of police violence resisted interracial policy brutality by fighting back, alerting the press, and pleading innocence in police court. Black women activists joined with men to stem the crisis of interracial police violence through protest parades, mock trials, mass meetings, and congressional lobbying.
本章记录了华盛顿特区警察种族化和性别化的跨种族暴力模式,以及黑人男女为结束这种暴力所做的努力。1928年至1938年间,该市的白人警察枪杀了40名黑人。虽然白人警察没有射杀黑人妇女和女孩,但至少有29名黑人妇女和女孩遭受了一系列暴力行为,包括街头骚扰、种族歧视、身体攻击和闯入她们的家。除了这些虐待事件外,白人警察还采取双重标准,拒绝对黑人妇女遭受虐待、强奸或谋杀进行调查;这是一种疏忽。遭受警察暴力的黑人妇女通过反击、提醒媒体、在警察法庭上辩护自己的清白来反抗种族间政策的暴行。黑人女性积极分子与男性一道,通过抗议游行、模拟审判、群众集会和国会游说,遏制了种族间警察暴力的危机。
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引用次数: 0
Washington Needs the Vote 华盛顿需要投票
Pub Date : 2018-11-19 DOI: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469646725.003.0006
M. Murphy
This chapter explores how, during the 1930s, black women waged an early civil rights movement in the nation’s capital.Inspired by the militancy of the Great Depression and influenced by on-going campaigns for safety and economic justice, activists protested racial segregation, lobbied for the passage of a civil rights bill, and pressed for the restoration of voting rights to all eligible residents of Washington, D.C., culminating in a referendum election in 1938. While African Americans waged similar types of movements around the country, activists in Washington, D.C. benefited from their close proximity to the federal government. As memories of the Civil War and Reconstruction surfaced in the 1930s, activists applied the lessons from these eras directly into their political campaigns as they worked to restore the freedoms that their ancestors had once enjoyed in Washington, D.C.
本章探讨了20世纪30年代黑人妇女如何在美国首都发动早期的民权运动。受到大萧条时期战斗精神的鼓舞,以及持续不断的安全和经济正义运动的影响,活动人士抗议种族隔离,游说通过民权法案,并敦促恢复华盛顿特区所有符合条件的居民的投票权,最终在1938年举行了全民公决选举。当非裔美国人在全国各地发起类似的运动时,华盛顿特区的活动人士受益于他们与联邦政府的密切关系。随着对内战和重建的记忆在20世纪30年代浮现,活动人士将这些时代的教训直接应用到他们的政治竞选中,努力恢复他们的祖先曾经在华盛顿特区享受过的自由
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引用次数: 0
The Women Will Be Factors in the Present Campaign 妇女将成为当前竞选活动的因素
Pub Date : 2018-11-19 DOI: 10.5149/northcarolina/9781469646725.003.0002
M. Murphy
This chapter examines black women’s national politics in the 1920s. For years, African American women had been organizing in their churches, mutual benefit associations, the Phyllis Wheatley Young Women’s Christian Association, and clubs. The ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment and pending presidential election in 1920 inspired women to connect their existing alliances with partisan causes. Black women seized on their location in the nation’s capital to advocate on behalf of African Americans living across the country. Black women across the city formed eight, distinctive political organizations, using them as instruments to lobby for economic justice, protest southern disfranchisement, express opinions about Supreme Court nominations, and weight in on which monuments and memorials would grace the national mall. While elite and middle-class women dominated the leadership of most political organizations, the National Association of Wage Earners attracted a working-class membership through its unique recruitment strategies and mission of economic justice.
本章考察20世纪20年代黑人妇女的国家政治。多年来,非裔美国妇女一直在组织她们的教堂、互惠协会、菲利斯·惠特利基督教青年妇女协会和俱乐部。第19条修正案的批准和1920年即将举行的总统选举激励了妇女们将她们现有的联盟与党派事业联系起来。黑人妇女利用她们在首都的位置,为生活在全国各地的非裔美国人发声。全市的黑人妇女组成了八个各具特色的政治组织,利用这些组织为经济公正进行游说,抗议南方被剥夺公民权,表达对最高法院提名的意见,以及在国家广场上修建哪些纪念碑和纪念碑的问题上发表意见。虽然精英和中产阶级女性主导了大多数政治组织的领导层,但全国工薪阶层协会通过其独特的招聘策略和经济正义的使命吸引了工薪阶层的成员。
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引用次数: 0
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Jim Crow Capital
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