Home Books Insurrection: Rebellion, Civil Rights, and the Pa…

Insurrection: Rebellion, Civil Rights, and the Paradoxical State of Black Citizenship

Insurrection: Rebellion, Civil Rights, and the Paradoxical State of Black Citizenship

by Hawa Allan

W. W. Norton & Company ·2022 ·272 pages
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
I Index
46/99
Maybe Someday

46/99

Critics' Rating Index

Maybe Someday

47/99

Readers' Rating Index

n/a

Scholars' Citation Index

34/99

Volume of Reviews

3/99

Volume of Reader Ratings

Sign in to add to your shelf, rate, or review this book.


About This Book

A brilliant debut by lawyer and critic Hawa Allan on the paradoxical state of black citizenship in the United States. The little-known and under-studied 1807 Insurrection Act was passed to give the president the ability to deploy federal military forces to fend off lawlessness and rebellion, but it soon became much more than the sum of its parts. Its power is integrally linked to the perceived threat of black American equity in what lawyer and critic Hawa Allan demonstrates is a dangerous paradox. While the Act was initially used to repress rebellion against slavery, during Reconstruction it was invoked by President Grant to quell white-supremacist uprisings in the South. During the civil rights movement, it enabled the protection of black students who attended previously segregated educational institutions. Most recently, the Insurrection Act has been the vehicle for presidents to call upon federal troops to suppress so-called "race riots" like those in Los Angeles in 1992, and for them to threaten to do so in other cases of racial justice activism. Yet when the US Capitol was stormed in January 2021, the impulse to restore law and order and counter insurrectionary threats to the republic lay dormant. Allan's distinctly literary voice underscores her paradigm-shifting reflections on the presence of fear and silence in history and their shadowy impact on the law. Throughout, she draws revealing insight from her own experiences as one of the only black girls in her leafy Long Island suburb, as a black lawyer at a predominantly white firm during a visit from presidential candidate Barack Obama, and as a thinker about the use and misuse of appeals to law and order. Elegant and profound, deeply researched and intensely felt, Insurrection is necessary reading in our reckoning with structural racism, government power, and protest in the United States.


Reviews

"Allan's prose seamlessly draws the personal and historical together in a book that general readers of U.S."

Chad Statler· Library Journal Read review ↗ Near the Top

"The result is a sprawling, yet personal, meditation on the history of the rights of black citizens in America ..."

Patrick Brennan· The Chicago Review of Books Read review ↗ Near the Top

"[Allan] provocatively but convincingly argues ..."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Allan weaves the perspectives of W.E.B."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

Preview


Reader Reviews

0 reviews

Sign in to write a review.

No reader reviews yet. Be the first!