Reviews
An important and timely book, especially given the recent historic changes in the American political scene.
Robert F. Jefferson provides a complex and nuanced—yet highly readable—account of the African American soldiers who served in the all-black and segregated U.S. Army's 93rd Infantry Division... A marvelous book.
Jefferson's Fighting for Hope is a rigorously researched, richly etched re-creation of the formation of the all-black Ninety-third Infantry Division, which fought in the Pacific theater.
Well-written work.
Fighting for Hope provides an immensely useful model for not only historians, but also political scientists studying how race, war, and culture shaped the lives of African Americans in the early twentieth century. For students of black military history, this book is a must read.
An invaluable contribution to military history, African American history, and American social history.
Book Details
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Recasting the African American Experience in World War II
Part I: The Crucible
1. The Great Depression and African American Youth Culture
2. Why
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Recasting the African American Experience in World War II
Part I: The Crucible
1. The Great Depression and African American Youth Culture
2. Why Should I Fight? Black Morale and War Department Racial Policy
3. Of Sage and Sand: Fort Huachuca and the U.S. 93rd Infantry Division
Part II: The Hand that Rocks the Cradle Holds the Shield
4. Service Families on the Move
5. War Maneuvers and Black Division Personnel
Part III: Race and Sex Matter in the Pacific
6. War, Race, and Rumor under the Southern Cross
7. Relative Security in the Southwest Pacific
Epilogue: Black 93rd Division Veterans and Former Service Families after World War II
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index