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The flaming swordThe flaming sword

The flaming sword

Dixon, Thomas, John David Smith

About this book

"Thomas Dixon's novel, The Flaming Sword (1939), is a scathing response to the ideas of the great black intellectual W.E.B. DuBois and to contemporary racial and international tensions. In the novel, Dixon portrays the doom of twentieth-century America as the result of a joint conspiracy by African Americans and Communists." "The Flaming Sword is not only a diatribe against communism, but is also Dixon's clarion call for the repatriation of African Americans. The story ignites when a sex-crazed black man named Dan Hose savagely murders a white man and his infant son; he then rapes and murders the man's sister-in-law (ostensibly after having read a James Weldon Johnson poem). The novel concludes with an urban uprising and a biting caricature and denunciation of DuBois." "Dixon's novel begins in a pastoral mode but moves quickly into a fast-paced melodrama. The Flaming Sword is a dramatic and provocative fictional treatment of the politics and history of race formation - the racial fantasies of one of America's most notorious white supremacists."--BOOK JACKET.

Details

OL Work ID
OL16940241W

Subjects

LynchingWhite supremacy movementsAfrican American criminalsRacismBack to Africa movementMurder victims' familiesAnti-communist movementsFictionFiction, generalUnited states, fiction

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.