Strung Up: How White America Learned to Lynch Black Children
Biographical Note: Dr. Stacey Patton is an award-winning journalist, author, college professor and nationally recognized child advocate whose work focuses on the elimination of corporal punishment in homes and schools. Her writings on education, child...
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Biographical Note: --Tim Wise, author of White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son and Dispatches from the Race War " Strung Up is a heart-wrenching but necessary examination of how children have been and are used as vehicles for indoctrination into this country's long-standing tradition of white supremacy. Do not turn away--bearing unflinching witness to the violence that disciplines us into submission, and the why behind it, can be the key to ending this, once and for all." --Alicia Garza, cofounder, Black Lives Matter Global Network "In powerful and unforgettable prose, Strung Up forces a reckoning with one of the most devastating truths in American history: Racial violence has never been about punishment but rather it was and is a weapon of domination, an object lesson on power and submission, especially for the young. By centering the experiences of Black children as victims of lynching and white children as its witnesses, Stacey Patton shows that violence has been a civic project meant to reproduce white supremacy one generation to the next." --Khalil Gibran Muhammad, professor of African American studies and public affairs, Princeton University " Strung Up is an argumentative masterpiece whose civilizational reproach beggars scholastic punctiliousness. Chapter eight--'Pediatric Experiments, Birth Records, and the War on Southern Black Midwives'--shows federal law transmogrified by clinicians and birth-record bureaucrats into a white supremacist century. To quote Patton: 'Doctors and bureaucrats traded ropes for scalpels, torches for birth certificates, and refined white supremacy into a clinical [American] project.' Strung Up, a necessary but terrible read." --David Levering Lewis, author of the two-volume Pulitzer Prize-winning W. E. B. Du Bois " Strung Up is a monumental text. With stunning intellectual, political, and moral clarity, Stacey Patton has provided the first full-fledged examination of Black child lynching in the United States. Anchored in history but in deep conversation with a dazzling array of disciplines and traditions, the book spotlights the wide range of forces that have normalized America's long-standing and unyielding war on Black children and Black childhood. This book is beautifully written, persuasively argued, and desperately needed." --Marc Lamont Hill, Presidential Professor of Urban Education and Black, Race, and Ethnic Studies, City University of New York Graduate Center " Strung Up is an unflinching and visionary work that recovers the central role of children in the making of racial violence. With depth and urgency, Stacey Patton shows how terror reached into the most intimate spaces--family, childhood, and even birth--to sustain white supremacy across generations. This is not just history--it is a powerful reckoning with forces that still shape American life." --Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow " Strung Up is a marvel of a book. Stacey Patton succeeds in blending history, psychology, and sociology into a brilliant excavation of systemic violence. The brutality that Black children have historically suffered continues in myriad forms to this day. Strung Up is precisely the kind of study needed to uproot the deeply embedded systems in American society that make this violence possible, one reader at a time." --Kimberlé Crenshaw, executive director, African American Policy Forum, and professor of law at Columbia and UCLA "Penned by one of America's most important and necessary scholars, this is not just a book about history, lynching, or even Black children. In Strung Up, Dr. Stacey Patton skillfully examines how America defines violence, which lives our society values, and why others are expendable." --Michael Harriot, New York Times best-selling author of Black AF History Table of Contents: Introduction: "Ought Children Be Born to Us?" Chapter 1: "The Fun We Had Burning the Niggers" How Love and Trauma Primed White Children to Normalize Collective Homicide Chapter 2: From the Nursery to the Gallows: How Europe Rehearsed Racial Violence on Its Own Children Chapter 3: "My Son Can't Learn Too Young the Proper Way to Treat a Nigger" The Trans-Atlantic Legacy of Public Execution and the Lynching of Jesse Washington Chapter 4: "The Time for You to Die Is Come" White Christianity, Profit, and the Ritualized Killing of Children in Colonial America Chapter 5: Birthing Racism: White Women as Biological Gatekeepers of Intergenerational Violence Chapter 6: "My Lord, We Plead Our Bellies" Lynching Black Pregnancy and the Scientific Racialization of the Black Unborn Chapter 7: "If Dat Chile Doan Soon Turn Colour There'll Be Trouble in Dis Family" The Fear of Changeling Babies and the Lynching of Black Infants and Toddlers Chapter 8: "Don't You Know a Negro Child's Scrotum Is Always Black?" Pediatric Experiments, Birth Records, and the War on Southern Black Midwives Chapter 9: "Go 'Long, White Man, I Ain't No 'SEPTEMBER MORN'!" Pedophilic Murder from Picture Postcards to the Lynching of Freddie Moore Chapter 10: "We Want to Kill Them All if We Can" White Guardians, Wealthy Black Children, Race Robbery, and Murder in Muskogee County, Oklahoma Epilogue: The Cold Case of Justice Acknowledgments Notes Index Publisher Marketing: A powerful, unsettling, and unflinching exploration that forces readers to confront lynching as a devastating legacy of white childhood conditioning, and to reckon with the corrupting force of a system that trained children to become its willing executioners Strung Up examines how the lynching of Black children became not an aberration, but a normalized feature of American racial violence. Drawing on meticulous archival research and vivid narrative storytelling, Strung Up traces how white supremacy trained itself socially, culturally, and psychologically to tolerate and ritualize the destruction of Black childhood, including the unborn. Nationally recognized child advocate Dr. Stacey Patton locates the roots of this violence not solely in the United States, but in Europe's long history of anti-child brutality. She reveals how centuries of public executions, corporal punishment, religious spectacle, and sanctioned cruelty exposed white children to extreme violence early and often. This violence, she argues, conditioned them to associate pain, domination, and death with moral order. Patton traces this desensitization across the Atlantic where white children raised within these traditions became adults primed to reproduce racial terror, transforming inherited practices of child cruelty into instruments of white supremacy in the post-emancipation United States. Blending history with developmental psychology, neuroscience, epigenetics, and research on adverse childhood experiences, Strung Up shows how violence is not only taught, but biologically and psychologically embedded across generations. Patton demonstrates how racial terror functioned as a system of socialization that shaped perception, behavior, and moral reasoning long before it produced the mob, the rope, or the fire. The image on the front cover is a World War I era photograph depicting a mock lynching of a Black child, reportedly at Camp Zachary Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky. The author purchased it from the Philip J. Merrill, Nanny Jack & Co Archives. |
