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People Wasn't Made To Burn Joe Allen

People Wasn't Made To Burn By Joe Allen

People Wasn't Made To Burn by Joe Allen


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Summary

The long-buried story of a Chicagoan's struggle for justice after four of his children perished in a tragic fire.

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People Wasn't Made To Burn Summary

People Wasn't Made To Burn: The True Story of Race, Housing and Murder in Chicago by Joe Allen

In 1947, James Hickman shot and killed the landlord he believed was responsible for a tragic fire which took the lives of four of his children on Chicago's west side. Prosecutors sought a death sentence for Hickman, but a vibrant defence campaign - which included the famous actress Tallulah Bankhead and acclaimed artist Ben Shahn - exposed how poverty and racism led to his crime and ultimately helped Hickman win his freedom. In the best tradition of true crime drama and narrative non-fiction, Joe Allen unearths the compelling story of that campaign.

People Wasn't Made To Burn Reviews

What I appreciate about Joe Allen's work is that he demonstrates as a historian the power of information meticulous, distilled, coherent, principled. John Pilger, author of Freedom Next Time In a remarkable feat of historical excavation and taut storytelling, Joe Allen tells the incredible story of James Hickman, an African-American man who struck back after a black Chicago slumlord and arsonist decimated his family and nearly destroyed his life. A stark look into a past of big city racism and poverty that we shouldn't forget and an important contribution to the history of social justice in America. Alex Heard, author of The Eyes of Willie McGee James Hickman was one of the hundreds of thousands of black Mississippians to move to Chicago in the 1940s. The nightmarish tragedy that befell the Hickman family there, as well as the actions of the dedicated activists who fought to save Hickman's life by revealing the institutional foundations of that tragedy, are vividly depicted in Joe Allen's important and moving history. Hickman's story illustrates the toxic nature of racial segregation and economic exploitation. The outraged community that united to support Hickman is a refreshing reminder of people's power to organize for change. Beryl Satter, author of Family Properties: Race, Real Estate, and the Exploitation of Black Urban America [A] remarkable book... Allen tells the story in admirably straightforward fashion...[painting] a horrific portrait of the inhumane conditions in which blacks were forced to live in the post WWII Chicago. Rick Kogan, Chicago Tribune People Wasn't Made to Burn presents the 1947 Hickman trial in Chicago and its revelations as a metaphor for racial prejudice and its effects on the lives of ordinary people. The book's story tells of James Hickman's frustration over his inability to get justice in the arson death of his four children, his subsequent killing of the landlord who was deliberately responsible for the fire, and the efforts of the heroic and conscience-arousing Hickman Defense Committee that enabled him to walk out of court a free man. Kenan Heise, author of Chicago Afternoons With Leon
What I appreciate about Joe Allen's work is that he demonstrates as a historian...the power of information-meticulous, distilled, coherent, principled. -John Pilger, author of Freedom Next Time In a remarkable feat of historical excavation and taut storytelling, Joe Allen tells the incredible story of James Hickman, an African-American man who struck back after a black Chicago slumlord and arsonist decimated his family and nearly destroyed his life. A stark look into a past of big city racism and poverty that we shouldn't forget-and an important contribution to the history of social justice in America. -Alex Heard, author of The Eyes of Willie McGee James Hickman was one of the hundreds of thousands of black Mississippians to move to Chicago in the 1940s. The nightmarish tragedy that befell the Hickman family there, as well as the actions of the dedicated activists who fought to save Hickman's life by revealing the institutional foundations of that tragedy, are vividly depicted in Joe Allen's important and moving history. Hickman's story illustrates the toxic nature of racial segregation and economic exploitation. The outraged community that united to support Hickman is a refreshing reminder of people's power to organize for change. -Beryl Satter, author of Family Properties: Race, Real Estate, and the Exploitation of Black Urban America [A] remarkable book... Allen tells the story in admirably straightforward fashion...[painting] a horrific portrait of the inhumane conditions in which blacks were forced to live in the post WWII Chicago. -Rick Kogan, Chicago Tribune People Wasn't Made to Burn presents the 1947 Hickman trial in Chicago and its revelations as a metaphor for racial prejudice and its effects on the lives of ordinary people. The book's story tells of James Hickman's frustration over his inability to get justice in the arson death of his four children, his subsequent killing of the landlord who was deliberately responsible for the fire, and the efforts of the heroic and conscience-arousing Hickman Defense Committee that enabled him to walk out of court a free man. -Kenan Heise, author of Chicago Afternoons With Leon

About Joe Allen

Joe Allen is a frequent contributor to the International Socialist Review and a long-standing social justice fighter, involved in the ongoing struggles for labor, abolition of the death penalty, and against the Iraq war.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1.) The Fire 2.) The Writer and the Sharecropper 3.) The Revolutionary 4.) This can happen to you. 5.) The Lawyer 6.) God is my secret judge 7.) Free James Hickman 8.) Holocaust on Ohio Street 9.) This man has paid enough 10.) A chain of personal memories

Additional information

CIN1608461262G
9781608461264
1608461262
People Wasn't Made To Burn: The True Story of Race, Housing and Murder in Chicago by Joe Allen
Used - Good
Hardback
Haymarket Books
20110908
218
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - People Wasn't Made To Burn