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Massachusetts - State & Local History, United States - Ethnic & Race Relations, Regional Studies - Northeast & Middle Atlantic U.S., Criminology - Violence
Boston Riots by Jack Tager β€” book cover

Boston Riots

by Jack Tager
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Overview

From the food uprisings in the early 1700s to the notorious anti-busing riots in the mid-1970s, incidents of communal social violence have played a significant role in Boston's history.

Jack Tager explores the more than 100 riots that occurred in the city over a span of nearly three centuries. Drawing on exhaustive research in newspaper archives, Jack Tager revisits both well- and lesser-known episodes, including the grain, impressment, brothel, and Pope Day riots of the eighteenth century; the anti-Catholic, abolition, and draft riots of the nineteenth century; and the Kosher meat, police strike, ghetto, and busing riots of the twentieth century.

Tager identifies the protagonists, highlights their motives and demands, and seeks to determine whether they realized their goals. He also examines how victims suffered at the hands of their fellow citizens, shows how law enforcement responded to the riots, and considers the complex social interactions and tensions that contributed to the uprisings. He finds that most incidents of violent civil disorder were initiated by the powerless lower classes who believed rioting was the only avenue for giving voice to their grievances over political, cultural, religious, or economic oppression.

This vivid portrait of an ever-changing community over time provides a revealing glimpse into peoples' anger, aspirations, and frustrations. It sheds new light on why groups are provoked to take unlawful action in response to unjust conditions, and it opens a fresh vista on the social history of Boston.

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Editorials

Library Journal

From 1700 to 1976, 103 riots ripped Boston, a city where social violence has been endemic. Tager (history, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst) details such acts of communal violence as the food, impressment, and Pope Day riots in the 18th century; the abolition and anti-Irish Catholic riots in the 19th century; and the 1919 Boston police strike, ghetto, and anti-busing riots in the 20th century. Regardless of class background, the rioters, states the author, employed violence to overcome their sense of hopelessness concerning their way of life as well as their powerlessness in the face of the ruling Boston elite. This well-documented, engaging book for both lay readers and specialists challenges the reader to question the meaning of citizenship and democracy whenever the possibility exists for various groups to use mass violence to address perceptions of social injustice. Recommended for public and academic libraries.--Charles L. Lumpkins, Pennsylvania State Univ., State Coll. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
December 31, 2000
Publisher
Boston : Northeastern University Press, c2001.
Pages
304
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781555534608

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