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246 Reviews of Books of North Carolina Press. 2001. Pp. x, 311. Cloth $49.95, paper $18.95. In this book, Kari Frederickson sketches a detailed picture on a large canvas. Her first two chapters consider the impact of the New Deal and World War 11 on the South, and the book's last chapter discusses presidential politics in the 1950s and 1960s. Much of the material in these chapters is derivative, and informed students of southern history will find little new or remarkable therein. The heart of the book focuses on the insurgency of states' rights southerners against the Democratic Party in 1948, a story that has been told often before but never in the close detail presented here. The author has combed archives and libraries across the South, with greatest attention to repositories in Mississippi, Alabama, and South Carolina (the three key states in the Dixiecrat revolt). Relying on dozens of manuscript collections and a full complement of local newspapers and periodicals, as well as the requisite secondary sources, she tells the fascinating story of one of the few significant challenges to the nation's two-party political system. Frederickson spins a good yarn about a quixotic and colorful movement. The Dixiecrats of this volumeplanters, mill owners, oil men, bankers, and attorneys-seem to have been motivated by a combination of heartfelt ideology, political opportunism, obstinacy, and racism. Disunity and fractiousness characterized the states' rights campaign. One of the book's real contributions is to give us a clearer view of the movement's leadership. Fielding Wright, the governor of Mississippi and vice-presidential candidate of the Dixiecrat Party, emerges as a more important figure than his subordinate place on the ticket would indicate. The party's presidential candidate, South Carolina Governor Strom Thurmond, is portrayed as somewhat less than a true believer, a calculating politician willing to use a generous dose of national publicity in 1948 as a springboard to the U.S. Senate in 1950. The book also underscores the seminal contributions to the states' rights movement of such comparatively unknown figures as Frank Dixon and Horace Wilkerson of Alabama, WaIter Sillers of Mississippi, and Leander Perez of Louisiana. As well, the book carefully details the heroic efforts of African-American newspaperman John Henry McCray to derail the Dixiecrat revolt in South Carolina. The efforts of the Dixiecrats produced less than they had hoped, Frederickson suggests, but ultimately more than they had planned. The insurgents sought to win the Solid South's 127 electoral votes, thereby denying Democratic incumbent Harry S. Truman or Republican Thomas Dewey a victory and forcing the election into the House of Representatives. But Thurmond and Wright won only four southern states-South Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana-for a total of thirty-nine electoral votes. The failed Dixiecrat revolt left Truman in the White House and the direction of the Democratic Party unchanged. Nevertheless, AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW "by breaking with the Democratic party," the author notes, "the Dixiecrat movement demonstrated to conservative southerners that allegiance to one party was 'neither necessary nor beneficial' and thus served as the crossover point for many southern voters in their move from the Democratic to the Republican column" (p. 4). To be sure, the Dixiecrats brought the end of the one-party South by trumpeting the cause of white supremacy but also by formulating a critique of New Deal liberalism and a powerful federal government. Although the formal structures of the States' Rights Democrats dissolved quickly in 1949-1950, a lasting taste for political independence and dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party remained. This residue became the soil in which the Republican Party blossomed. Frederickson's book makes several important contributions to our understanding of post-World War 11 politics in the South. First, her nuanced retelling of the Dixiecrat saga shreds the interpretation, posited by political scientist V. O. Key and southern journalists writing in the late 1940s and early 1950s, that states' rights forces failed to employ race baiting effectively in 1948. Her view more sensibly notes that loyal Democrats portrayed themselves as more capable defenders of the region's racial mores and drove the Dixiecrats out of the party. Second, her discussion of context, ranging both backward and forward in time from 1948, underscores the complexity of the political transformation in the South in the last half century. Finally, her careful examination of the events of 1948 at the local and state levels in the South presents a more vivid picture at the grassroots level of political change. As a result, we have a clearer idea of why southerners voted-or did not vote-for Thurmond and Wright. ROGER BILES East Carolina University MARY L. DUDZIAK. Cold War Civil Rights: Race and the Image of American Democracy. (Politics and Society in Twentieth-Century America.) Princeton: Princeton University Press. 2000. Pp. xii, 330. $29.95. Over the past two decades, studies of the civil rights movement have become increasingly localized. National civil rights leaders and organizations have been pushed to the margins of scholarly focus by ordinary and extraordinary grassroots women and men whose inspiration and commitment propelled the civil rights movement forward. Without detracting from the importance of the local origins of the black freedom struggle, Mary L. Dudziak lucidly presents the case for attaching a global perspective to racial reform in the United States. "The international context structures relationships between 'domestic' actors," she writes. "It influences the timing, nature, and extent of social change" (p. 17). Based on this premise, Dudziak contends that, overall, the Cold War played a positive role in extending first-class citizenship to African Americans. FEBRUARY 2002 Canada and the United States Scholars of postwar America have generally portrayed the effect of the Cold War on social reform in a less favorable light. They have suggested that anticommunist hysteria in the late 1940s and early 1950s removed options for more radical racial and economic changes in the South than those offered by the civil rights movement. By repressing Communists, independent left-wingers, and union organizers, southern McCarthyites not only delayed the timing of reform but also narrowed its possibilities to obtaining constitutional rights rather than restructuring class relations. Dudziak does not discount the harmful effects of the Cold War; however, she maintains that U.S. strategy in waging it played an equal if not greater role in forcing the federal government to support the black freedom struggle. At a time when people of color in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia were gaining liberation, American diplomats grew increasingly sensitive to the media coverage that racial conflict in the South received in these newly emerging nations. After all, how could the United States hold itself up as the standard bearer of democracy against Soviet tyranny while southern blacks were prevented from voting and subject to the indignities of segregation? Dudziak correctly views the Cold War as a doubleedged sword. In stressing the beneficial aspects, she provides a useful counterweight to previous accounts that underscore the harmful sides of domestic redbaiting. Indeed, even without a vigorous anticommunist campaign to maintain white supremacy, it is questionable that civil rights advocates would have achieved their goals sooner in the face of powerful white racism that continued to grip the South in the postwar period. In spite of anticommunist repression at home and because of the policy of containing the Soviet Union abroad, reformers were able to convince Washington officials to adopt civil rights measures for fear of losing vital propaganda battles with their Communist adversary. The United States Information Service presented a narrative of racial progress that accentuated gradual but steady advancement toward equality, despite violent episodes in Little Rock, Arkansas and Birmingham, Alabama. Dudziak establishes that the U.S. was generally successful in persuading third world nations of its sincerity in extending democracy to its own citizens of color. Ironically, by the mid-1960s, much of this favorable image began to decline as Vietnam and American militarism replaced domestic racism as the chief foreign policy concern throughout the world. This book offers valuable insights into both the civil rights movement and the conduct of American foreign policy. Clearly written and based mainly on State Department and presidential archives, this book should have wide appeal for classroom use at all levels of instruction. Dudziak successfully argues that, during the period in which the United States undertook global responsibility for constructing a world order compatible with its political, economic, and cultural interests, the "boundaries of domestic and foreign affairs be- AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW 247 came blurred" (p. 253). Although she adeptly constructs this narrative from the vantage point of presidents and diplomats, she is not as effective in showcasing how civil rights groups, both national and local, were specifically influenced by global events and forged protest strategies with an international audience in mind. To accomplish this would require carefully exploring the records of these organizations, which, with the exception of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Dudziak appears not to have done. Furthermore, the international consequences of the Cold War on the American scene had definite limitations. For example, the author might have pointed out that the Cold War supplied leverage that African Americans could exploit, but it was not sufficient to force the State Department to remove racial barriers in the hiring of its career service officers. Although such issues merit further explanation, Dudziak has written an intelligent and informative book that is sure to become a staple of both civil rights and Cold War historiography. STEVEN F. LAWSON Rutgers University JAMES T. PATTERSON. Brown v. Board of Education: A Civil Rights Milestone and Its Troubled Legacy. (Pivotal Moments in American History.) New York: Oxford University Press. 2001. Pp. xxx, 285. $27.50. In his history of Brown v. Board of Education, James T. Patterson has set himself the task of exploring the complex issues that Brown tried to resolve in 1954 and of identifying "the most important legacies of the decision in our own time" (p. xiv). The editors tell us that the book is the first in a series called Pivotal Moments in American History. "Each book will examine a large historical problem through the lens of a particular event and the choices of individual actors" (p. xi). Brown has, of course, been the subject of countless books and articles, including Richard Kluger's celebratory history, Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black America's Struggle for Equality (1975), and J. Harvie Wilkinson's From Brown to Bakke: The Supreme Court and School Integration, 1954-1978 (1979). Patterson spends over half of his book revisiting the issues surveyed by Kluger and Wilkinson. He uncovers no new facts regarding the first twenty-five years after Brown but instead provides the reader with both a clear picture of the pivotal events and players and an assessment of the events in light of developments of the 1980s and 1990s. Perhaps most valuable are the author's efforts to evaluate Brown in light of the varying visions of the goals its supporters pursued and its opponents feared, as well as the varying interpretations of the meaning of Brown. The preface reveals the problem in deciding whether Brown was a "success" or not. One's expectations largely determine one's reactions to the decision and its aftermath, and "many large expectations of the FEBRUARY 2002