Description
Book SynopsisIn July 1964, after a white police officer shot and killed a Black teenage boy, unrest broke out in Harlem and then Bedford-Stuyvesant. Christopher Hayes examines the causes and consequences of the uprisings, providing a vivid portrait of postwar New York, a new perspective on the civil rights era, and a timely analysis of racial inequality.
Trade ReviewAn immersive chronicle of the July 1964 uprising in New York City’s Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhoods over the police killing of a Black teenager . . . Hayes unpacks the causes and effects of the uprising in scrupulous detail, and makes salient connections to recent events. This scholarly history is a powerful reminder that it takes ‘great force’ to bend the moral arc of the universe toward justice. * Publishers Weekly *
The Harlem Uprising offers a powerful narrative of the riots and upheaval in Harlem and other African American neighborhoods in New York City in the summer of 1964. Hayes’s vividly written book provides a stinging portrayal of midcentury New York from the perspective of Black New Yorkers and offers an important new historiography of the carceral state. -- Kim Phillips-Fein, author of
Fear City: New York’s Fiscal Crisis and the Rise of Austerity PoliticsSuch a needed study of New York's long history of racial inequality in housing, schools, jobs, and policing and the years of frustrated civil rights struggles that laid the ground for the 1964 Harlem uprising. Hayes examines Mayor Lindsay's decision to constitute a majority-civilian CCRB in its wake, the swift and successful police-led backlash that ended it, and the law and order politics that gained ascendancy in the city and the nation. -- Jeanne Theoharis, author of
A More Beautiful and Terrible History: The Uses and Misuses of Civil Rights HistoryThis is an exceptionally important and powerful book about white racism and police brutality in the Jim Crow North, especially New York City. That postwar urban crisis produced the 1964 Harlem and Brooklyn uprisings. This book’s argument is forceful and its grasp of historiography is masterful. -- Komozi Woodard, author of
A Nation Within a Nation: Amiri Baraka and Black Power PoliticsThe Harlem Uprising is a welcome contribution to the intertwined histories of liberalism, policing, and urban rebellions in New York and, more broadly, the urban North. * Gotham: A Blog for Scholars of New York History *
The Harlem Uprising refines our understanding of protest culture in America and reminds us once again that neither James Powell in 1964 nor George Floyd in 2020 fell victim to individual failure but a failing system. * H-Soz-Kult *
In this gripping and detailed account, the book explores how those in power have refused to address structural racism, while also examining the limits of liberalism. * Diversifying and Decolonising Economics (D-Econ) *
A highly readable and evocative rendering of the Harlem uprising of 1964, its causes, and its immediate policy aftermath. * History of Education Quarterly *
The Harlem Uprising is deserving of a wide readership. Hayes’s clear and engaging prose makes the work accessible, while his historical insight and contributions will be of use and interest to historians of urban America, the civil rights movement, and police brutality. The work also recontextualizes the history of policing, violence, and the Black community in New York and makes important inferences about local practices of injustice that still plague the city and state. * New York History *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
1. Living
2. Working
3. Union Work
4. Learning
5. The New York City Police Department
6. A Death and Protests
7. Daybreak: Sunday, July 19
8. Spreading Anxiety: Monday, July 20
9. Day Four: Tuesday, July 21
10. Day Five: Wednesday, July 22
11. Day Six: Thursday, July 23
12. After
13. Reforming the Civilian Complaint Review Board
14. A Referendum
Epilogue: Insufficient Funds
Notes
Bibliography
Index