Underground History

Paul Robeson: Genius, Persecution, and the Uncomfortable Truth of an American Icon

26 min · 18 de ene de 2026
Portada del episodio Paul Robeson: Genius, Persecution, and the Uncomfortable Truth of an American Icon

Descripción

Paul Robeson was a quintessential 20th-century Renaissance man whose unparalleled talents as a scholar, athlete, artist, and activist were inextricably linked to his unyielding fight against global white supremacy. His career trajectory, particularly his expatriate success in England and his controversial embrace of the Soviet Union, was a direct response to the systemic racism that defined and ultimately sought to destroy him in his native United States. His confrontation with the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) was not merely a defense of his political beliefs but the culmination of a life spent challenging the legitimacy of a nation that celebrated his gifts while denying his humanity. A figure of immense talent and profound conviction, Robeson rose to global prominence as a two-time All-American football player, a Phi Beta Kappa scholar, a Columbia-educated lawyer, a pioneering actor on stage and screen, and a concert singer with a bass-baritone voice of legendary power and beauty. Yet, these extraordinary accomplishments were perpetually shadowed by the reality of Jim Crow America.

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episode The Crimson Thread: Unionist Resistance in the North Carolina Quaker Belt artwork

The Crimson Thread: Unionist Resistance in the North Carolina Quaker Belt

During the Civil War and Reconstruction, North Carolina was deeply divided, not only between Union and Confederacy but within its own communities. Secret Unionist organizations such as the Red Strings operated throughout the Piedmont, especially in Quaker and German-influenced regions, resisting Confederate authority, aiding deserters, and sometimes cooperating with the Underground Railroad. These internal conflicts exposed the myth of a unified Confederacy and revealed widespread dissent rooted in class, religion, and geography. After the war, white supremacist groups including the Ku Klux Klan and later the Red Shirts used organized terror, sexual violence, and political intimidation to overturn Reconstruction governments and suppress Black citizenship and white Unionist influence. Federal intervention through Klan trials briefly challenged this violence, but “Redemption” ultimately restored white Democratic control. The legacy of this era—often minimized or erased—continues to shape historical memory, local identities, and debates over who is remembered as an American “hero.”

24 de ene de 20261 h 0 min