Guno צְבִי
We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
Baldwin's question is therefore particularly applicable to life below the Mason-Dixon line. Yet most historians of the post-Civil War South have been so preoccupied with the issues of segregation and integration that they have slighted the Southern search for Negro servility. Professor C. Vann Woodward is a case in point. Early in the fall of 1954, soon after the United States Supreme Court issued its landmark school desegregation decision (Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka), he delivered the James W. Richard Lectures at the University of Virginia. Published as The Strange Career of Jim Crow, these lectures reflected contemporary anxiety over the future of interracial . . .
https://www.questia.com/library/1930272/the-white-savage-racial-fantasies-in-the-postbellum
https://www.questia.com/library/1930272/the-white-savage-racial-fantasies-in-the-postbellum