This classic work goes into every aspect of the American shame - the comprehensive mistreatment of black people that has made a mockery of our claim of liberty and justice for all.
First published in 1944, the book describes all of the malevolent practices that kept African-Americans from even approaching the American dream. Myrdal cites the attitude of respect for what he calls the American Creed that is universal among both whites and blacks in the United States, but that is held at the same time, and with little discomfort, with bigoted views by whites.
Emphasis is of course on the southern states but the north was (is) not free of the prejudice that accepts racial equality in principle, but didn't want blacks in the neighborhood or workplace.
The history of slavery is here as is the virtual return to slavery that was enforced by the South after the brief period of Radical Reconstruction following the Civil War. The great migration to the north by blacks in the southern states is recounted as is the Harlem renaissance. Labor relations, the closed door of most unions and the limitation of black employment to the dirtiest and most menial jobs is reviewed. The views of Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois are examined in the period before the world had heard of Martin Luther King, Jr.
The white mindset in the north and south is captured through extensive interviews throughout the country. The psychology that supports lower class white unity through bigotry is dissected. Myrdal, being white, had no difficulty getting whites to open up letting the reader understand how complete was the suppression of every attempt by blacks to take their place as equals. We get to see how the white primary, the poll tax, literacy tests and outright physical threats succeeded in keeping blacks away from the polls, denying them the very representation they needed politically to bring change.
Myrdal didn't hesitate to write about the effects of slavery on the psychology of blacks. The subservience that made for survival in bondage, the endless attempt to escape from work without pay survived emancipation in habits that reinforced white appraisal of blacks in the not baseless accusations of laziness and slow performance.
Times have changed since this book was written. Share cropping has disappeared as have poll taxes and the white primary. The famous Brown vs Board of Education ruling by the Supreme Court was 10 years in the future in 1944. No longer do we see the "we reserve the right to refuse service to anyone" signs that I saw frequently in the South of the 1950's.
Progress has been made, but not without endless struggle in court and in the court of public opinion. Incidents of executions of blacks by the police occur to this day. Nixon's famous "southern strategy" worked to gain votes through bigotry, shifting the historically Democratic South to the Republican Party we see today that consists almost entirely of white faces. Terrible carnage by gang members continues in the black ghettoes of large American cities, as does the disproportionate conviction and imprisonment rate for blacks. But it has our attention and concern.
This book is a must read for white Americans, in particular because today white males have a legitimate complaint that they are discriminated against in the name of diversity. Today schools and businesses rush to show a rainbow student body or workforce. Balance is the watchword and because of this blacks at long last have opportunities that were traditionally denied them. Their complete rejection by society has been replaced by a very partial rejection by business of white males. This book makes clear that there is no comparison. It is difficult for this white male reader to see how any progress could have been made without affirmative action. A legitimate question now is how far it should go.
I wish that every societal problem could be examined in the highly professional way this study was done.
Because this has become a textbook, the price for a new copy is outrageous and a Kindle edition is almost $50. Check your local library and be on the lookout at yard sales for a 25 cent copy.