“We Are Not What We Seem”: Rethinking Black Working-Class Opposition in the Jim Crow South
Author(s): Robin D. G. Kelley
Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/2079698
Read the article attached and answer this set of questions. Do not use outside sources, only use this article to answer the questions.
According to historian Robin D.G. Kelley article, what are “infrapolitics”? How do they work and help us understand working-class people’s resistance to oppression?
How did southern working-class African Americans’ often under the national radar and sometimes “disguised” resistance to segregated public transportation reveal their everyday political consciousness and opposition to Jim Crow?
How does it show the capacity of working-class people’s resistance to shape power relations and politics in the Jim Crow South? How does looking at working-class activism change our understandings of who resisted Jim Crow and how?
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