2 Books Published by University of Hawaii Press on AALBC — Book Cover Collage

Click for more detail about Fighting in Paradise: Labor Unions, Racism, and Communists in the Making of Modern Hawaii by Gerald Horne Fighting in Paradise: Labor Unions, Racism, and Communists in the Making of Modern Hawaii

by Gerald Horne
University of Hawaii Press (Jul 31, 2011)
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Powerful labor movements played a critical role in shaping modern Hawaii, beginning in the 1930s, when International Longshore and Warehousemen’s Union (ILWU) representatives were dispatched to the islands to organize plantation and dock laborers. They were stunned by the feudal conditions they found in Hawaii, where the majority of workers?Hawaiian, Japanese, Chinese, and Filipino in origin?were routinely subjected to repression and racism at the hands of white bosses.The wartime civil liberties crackdown brought union organizing to a halt; but as the war wound down, Hawaii workers’ frustrations boiled over, leading to an explosive success in the forming of unions. During the 1950s, just as the ILWU began a series of successful strikes and organizing drives, the union came under McCarthyite attacks and persecution. In the midst of these allegations, Hawaii’s bid for statehood was being challenged by powerful voices in Washington who claimed that admitting Hawaii to the union would be tantamount to giving the Kremlin two votes in the U.S. Senate, while Jim Crow advocates worried that Hawaii’s representatives would be enthusiastic supporters of pro–civil rights legislation.Hawaii’s extensive social welfare system and the continuing power of unions to shape the state politically are a direct result of those troubled times. Based on exhaustive archival research in Hawaii, California, Washington, and elsewhere, Gerald Horne’s gripping story of Hawaii workers’ struggle to unionize reads like a suspense novel as it details for the first time how radicalism and racism helped shape Hawaii in the twentieth century.


Click for more detail about The White Pacific: U.S. Imperialism and Black Slavery in the South Seas After the Civil War by Gerald Horne The White Pacific: U.S. Imperialism and Black Slavery in the South Seas After the Civil War

by Gerald Horne
University of Hawaii Press (Jun 01, 2007)
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As the US Civil War dragged on, freebooters took advantage of the development of new sources for sugar & cotton to establish an alternative slave trade in Melanesians & Polynesians. This book tells the story of the South Seas slave trade.