|
Product Description
In the mid-1990s, residents of Anniston, Alabama, began a legal fight against the agrochemical company Monsanto over the dumping of PCBs in the city's historically African American and white working-class west side. Simultaneously, Anniston environmentalists sought to safely eliminate chemical weaponry that had been secretly stockpiled near the city during the Cold War. In this probing work, Ellen Griffith Spears offers a compelling narrative of Anniston's battles for environmental justice, exposing how systemic racial and class inequalities reinforced during the Jim Crow era played out in these intense contemporary social movements.Spears focuses attention on key figures who shaped Anniston--from Monsanto's founders, to white and African American activists, to the ordinary Anniston residents whose lives and health were deeply affected by the town's military-industrial history and the legacy of racism. Situating the personal struggles and triumphs of Anniston residents within a larger national story of regulatory regimes and legal strategies that have affected toxic towns across America, Spears unflinchingly explores the causes and implications of environmental inequalities, showing how civil rights movement activism undergirded Anniston's campaigns for redemption and justice.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- What Nature Suffers to Groe: Life, Labor, and Landscape on the Georgia Coast, 1680-1920 (Wormsloe Foundation Publication Ser.)
- Car Country: An Environmental History (Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books)
- The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation After the Genome
- Dispossessed Lives: Enslaved Women, Violence, and the Archive (Early American Studies)
- Mass Destruction: The Men and Giant Mines That Wired America and Scarred the Planet
- Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life
- Aloha America: Hula Circuits through the U.S. Empire
- Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America - Updated Edition (Politics and Society in Modern America)
- Creatures of Empire: How Domestic Animals Transformed Early America
- Chicken: The Dangerous Transformation of America's Favorite Food (Yale Agrarian Studies Series)
*If this is not the "Baptized in PCBs (New Directions in Southern Studies)" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Dec 21, 2024 02:19 +08.