Class Warfare in Black Atlanta

Grassroots Struggles, Power, and Repression under Gentrification

By Augustus Wood

Class Warfare in Black Atlanta

Approx. 360 pp., 6.125 x 9.25, 9 halftones, 1 maps, 5 tables, notes, bibl., index

  • Paperback ISBN: 978-1-4696-8568-7
    Published: May 2025
  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4696-8567-0
    Published: May 2025

Justice, Power, and Politics

Paperback Available May 2025, but pre-order your copy today!

Buy this Book

For Professors:
Free E-Exam Copies

To purchase online via an independent bookstore, visit Bookshop.org
Between 1966 and 2015, the city of Atlanta was transformed. Black politicians ascended to the top of the power structure for the first time thanks to newly enfranchised Black working-class voters. The demographics of the city shifted in the late '60s and early '70s, and the combination of Black empowerment and white flight produced a growing Black working-class majority that increasingly demanded Black Power policies that often clashed with the policies supported by affluent residents. But by the 2010s, Atlanta's city core had been thoroughly gentrified, and the ability of Black working-class Atlantans to organize and build power had diminished significantly.

Tracing the history of post–civil rights Black Atlanta through rigorous class analysis, Augustus Wood argues that Black and white elites responded to an energized and politicized Black working class by forging a public-private partnership power bloc in Atlanta, positioning the relatively small but rising Black middle class as participants in the colonizing of working-class Black bodies and spaces—expanding the racial class contradictions in Black Atlanta. This bloc worked to shift state funding away from public services and toward gentrification projects that demolished subsidized housing and ramped up police surveillance to deter working-class resistance. Paying close attention to political economy and class while drawing on unexamined archival sources and oral histories of Black working-class Atlantans, especially Black women, Wood reframes our understanding of contemporary Black urban life by highlighting the centrality of intraracial class conflict in the dynamics of urban space.

About the Author

Augustus Wood is assistant professor in the School of Labor and Employment Relations at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
For more information about Augustus Wood, visit the Author Page.

Reviews

"Sound, unapologetic, and provocative. Class Warfare in Black Atlanta is a game-changing treatment of gentrification in Atlanta."—Winston A. Grady-Willis, author of Challenging U.S. Apartheid: Atlanta and Black Struggles for Human Rights, 1960–1977

"A cutting-edge intervention in contemporary discourse. Wood comprehensively reconstructs the history of Black Atlanta in the post–civil rights era from a class analysis in the Black radical tradition."—Akinyele Omowale Umoja, author of We Will Shoot Back: Armed Resistance in the Mississippi Freedom Movement