George Philip Rawick (December 8, 1929 – June 27, 1990) was a pioneering historian of slavery whose work transformed the field by centering the voices and experiences of slaves. He is best known for editing the monumental 41-volumeOriginally a 19 volume history in 1971-2 there were two supplements, one in 1977 and one in 1979 that took it to 41 volumes. from the Bowdoin website , which brought the testimonies of former slaves - recorded by the Federal Writers' Project in the 1930s - into the academic mainstream. In an era when historical narratives of slavery were still dominated by planter perspectives, Rawick’s work broke new ground by arguing that oral histories from former slaves should be treated with the same seriousness as written records from slaveholders. His interpretive framework, deeply influenced by Marxism and the Black radical tradition, emphasized the agency, culture, and resistance of enslaved communities and helped lay the groundwork for later scholarship by historians such as Eugene Genovese, Herbert Gutman, and John Blassingame.
Over his long career in academia, Rawick taught at Washington University in St. Louis, Wayne State University, State University of New York, the University of Chicago, and the University of Missouri-St. Louis, among others."Two Will Speak on Black History". Saint Louis Post Dispatch, 1 November 1982, p. 10. Rawick held brief postings at Harvard University and Cornell University. Rawick claims his lack of academic writing in these positions was due to opposition at the upper levels of academia due to his Marxism.
In 1967, Rawick went on a speaking tour in Germany and Italy. His main talking points were on Black revolt and the capitalist restructuring of the 1930s. He spoke in many cities, including Berlin, Milan, Frankfurt, and Florence. Rawick spoke to thousands of students in universities at every city he visited.
His papers are held at the Western Historical Manuscripts Collection at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.
In the early 1950s, Rawick joined the Trotskyite Independent Socialist League, where he eventually becoming editor of the magazine Anvil. He later became involved with the Detroit-based Facing Reality group, led by C. L. R. James, whose emphasis on Black radicalism and labor struggle deeply shaped Rawick’s thinking. During trips to London, he met African, African American, and Caribbean intellectuals such as George Lamming, Aimé Césaire, and Kwame Ture, prompting him to take slavery more seriously as a scholarly subject. He also wrote for the journal Radical America, which published his influential essay, "Working Class Self-Activity," in 1969.
From 1963 to 1968, Rawick traveled frequently to London to work with C. L. R. James. On a visit in 1964, James asked Rawick to give a lecture on American history to guests at his home. After Rawick finished, James asked him if he knew anything about the slaves' own reactions of being enslaved. Rawick quickly realized he did not know much about how the slaves' felt, but recalled that there was a collection of interviews done by ex-slaves in the late 1930s. This interaction led to Rawick's monumental work, The American Slave: A Composite Autobiography. Rawick made all of the interviews done by ex-slaves available to students and scholars.
David Roediger analyzed primary sources from the George P. Rawick Papers found at the University of Missouri to craft his introduction. Roediger describes the development of Rawick's ideology in radical labor and the Black freedom movement in Detroit and London. Enoch H. Page uses his experience in studying and working with Rawick to contextualize Rawick's capabilities as an oral historian and dialectician. Rawick used his skills to be able to forge relationships with radical African American students and scholars in St. Louis. Ferruccio Gambino writes about Rawick's speaking tour in Italy in 1967. Rawick lectured at universities in front of crowds of radical students and workers. Rawick spoke to them about the civil rights campaign in the United States, and the struggles of workers in Detroit's automobile factories. George Lipsitz was a teaching assistant for Rawick during the 1970s. Lipsitz writes about Rawick's impact as a scholar and activist in the working class struggle, African American resistance, and stopping the spread of white supremacy.
Listening to Revolt was released in 2010, 20 years after the death of George Rawick.
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