Raising the redwood curtain : labor landscapes and community violence in a Pacific littoral /

"Raising the Redwood Curtain explores how the growth of state power and the expansion of capitalism promoted migrations across the Pacific, instances of genocide, ethnic cleansing, and labor struggles in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries"-- Provided by publisher.

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Karp, Michael T., 1988- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Lincoln : University of Nebraska Press, [2025]
Series:Studies in Pacific worlds.
Subjects:
Description
Summary:"Raising the Redwood Curtain explores how the growth of state power and the expansion of capitalism promoted migrations across the Pacific, instances of genocide, ethnic cleansing, and labor struggles in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries"-- Provided by publisher.
"Raising the Redwood Curtain explores how shifting land use practices and exploitative labor patterns spurred by the colonial settlement of the Pacific world influenced the genocide of California's Native people, anti-Asian campaigns, and the oppression of eastern European immigrant workers. By carefully examining these local developments, it explores how global capitalism fundamentally reordered labor patterns and social relations. By analyzing the history of three episodes of labor and racial violence in Humboldt County, California, Michael T. Karp spans nearly a century in a detailed examination of the causes and interconnections between the Indian Island massacre of 1860, the expulsion of Chinese and Japanese people from the county between 1885 and 1906, and the killing and persecution of eastern Europeans during the Great Lumber Strike of 1935. Regional labor and land use patterns shaped these events, but so did global economic developments and environmental change, connecting disparate acts of racial violence across time. By bringing together new scholarship on the American West, environmental history, and the Pacific world, Michael T. Karp illustrates the importance of considering communities on the periphery to better understand the violence that defined the colonial settlement of North America. "-- Provided by publisher.
Physical Description:xiv, 309 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9781496220288
1496220285