Elaine Elinson

Wherever There's a Fight: How Runaway Slaves, Suffragists, Immigrants, Strikers, and Poets Shaped Civil Liberties in California

The first-ever account of the struggle to develop and protect rights in the Golden State



Wherever There's a Fight captures the sweeping story of how freedom and equality have grown in California, from the gold rush right up to the precarious post-9/​11 era. The book tells the stories of the brave individuals who have stood up for their rights in the face of social hostility, physical violence, economic hardship, and political stonewalling.

It connects the experiences of early Chinese immigrants subjected to discriminatory laws to those of professionals who challenged McCarthyism and those of people who have fought to gain equal rights in California schools: people of color, people with disabilities, and people standing up for their religious freedom. The authors bring a special focus to the World War II internment of Japanese Americans, focusing on the infamous Korematsu case, which was foreshadowed by a century of civil liberties violations and reverberates in more recent times—regrettably, even today in the Patriot Act. And they follow the ongoing struggles for workers' rights and same-sex marriage.

State and federal constitutions spell out many liberties and rights, but it is the people who challenge prejudice and discrimination that transform those lofty ideals into practical realities. Wherever There's a Fight paints vivid portraits of these people and brings to light their often hidden stories.

Reviews

"[Wherever There's a Fight] should itself become required reading in our state's underfunded and largely segregated schools."

—San Francisco Chronicle
"Elinson (coauthor of The Development Debacle) and Yogi (co-editor of Highway 99) offer crucial perspective on the history of minority rights in a state long considered a political trendsetter....Readers will find this an essential reference in navigating the slogan-riddled civil rights issues of the day."

—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

Selected Works

Articles
San Francisco's Own Rosa Parks
Charlotte Brown defied a color bar on San Francisco street cars while the Civil War was still raging.
"A lesson in American history riding the 14 Mission bus"
What a ride on the city bus can tell you about your fellow passengers – and yourself.
"Soup, salad, suffrage: How women won their right to vote in California"
Untold history of working women’s efforts to secure the vote in San Francisco.
Nonfiction
Development Debacle: The World Bank in the Philippines
Expose of how U.S. investment in the Philippines bolstered the oligarchy and oppressed the poor.