race, politics, and citizenship in Jim Crow Virginia /
J. Douglas Smith.
Chapel Hill :
University of North Carolina Press,
c2002.
xiv, 411 p. :
ill.; maps ;
25 cm.
Based on author's thesis (doctoral)--University of Virginia.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [371]-395) and index.
Introduction : separation by consent -- A fine discrimination indeed : party politics and white supremacy from emancipation to world war -- Opportunities found and lost : race and politics after world war -- Redefining race : the campaign for racial purity -- Educating citizens or servants? : Hampton Institute and the divided mind of white Virginians -- Little tyrannies and petty skullduggeries -- A melancholy distinction : Virginia's response to lynching -- The erosion of paternalism : confronting the limits of managed race relations -- Travelling in opposite directions -- Too radical for us : the passing of managed race relations -- Epilogue : the making of massive resistance.