The Business of Bigotry

John Van Evrie's Nineteenth-Century Racist Media Empire

Michael E Woods author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:The University of North Carolina Press

Publishing:8th Sep '26

£26.99

This title is due to be published on 8th September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Business of Bigotry cover

Amid nineteenth-century America’s fierce battles over slavery and freedom, few proslavery partisans argued more vehemently for the supremacy of the white race than John Van Evrie (1814–96). A New York–based propagandist, writer, book publisher, and editor of the New York Day Book, Van Evrie leveraged the era’s rapidly expanding media and communications landscape to advance his cause. Throughout his career, he promoted pseudoscientific justifications for racism, proclaimed slavery as beneficial to society, and created a media network criticizing abolitionists, Republicans, and Democrats alike. Despite the Civil War’s defeat of Van Evrie’s cause, his success in cultivating an audience and market for his views allowed him to continue publishing during Reconstruction, rallying support among white readers for policies and practices that would continue to subordinate Black Americans.

Tracing Van Evrie’s failures and chilling successes over a career of some forty years, Michael E. Woods reveals the stunning resilience of racist ideology before and after the Civil War. In doing so, Woods demonstrates how the era’s print media, business systems, and political alliances allowed ideas like Van Evrie’s to flourish, even as Reconstruction promised a new birth of freedom for Americans of all races.

“This finely rendered work by one of our leading historians tells the disturbing yet compelling story of how a nineteenth-century scoundrel exploited the media revolution of his day to promulgate racism.”—Adam I. P. Smith, author of The Stormy Present: Conservatism and the Problem of Slavery in Northern Politics, 1846–1865

“Those who want to understand our current media landscape should consider the cautionary tale of John Van Evrie, the Northern media mogul who built a malevolent empire of proslavery propaganda in the Civil War era. Van Evrie’s premise was that racism sells—and his trafficking in white supremacy, as a slogan and program, casts a shadow over our politics to this day.”— Elizabeth R. Varon, author of Longstreet: The Confederate General Who Defied the South

ISBN: 9781469696768

Dimensions: 235mm x 25mm x 155mm

Weight: unknown

352 pages