Edwin Setiadi

10%
Flag icon
Sicilian immigrants—especially those who were seen as having any association, real or imagined, with the mafia—were susceptible to a kind of bigotry and racism that African Americans knew all too well. In a sense, they now had a shared experience, however temporal, as “niggers.” There may well have resulted a kind of kindred understanding, perhaps empathy or solidarity, that laid the groundwork for a mutually conducive working relationship.
Dangerous Rhythms: Jazz and the Underworld
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview