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Historical Roots of the Urban Crisis

Blacks in the Industrial City, 1900-1950

Walter Hill author Henry L Taylor Jr author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Inc

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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Historical Roots of the Urban Crisis cover

This collection of 12 new essays will tell the story of how the gradual transformation of industrial society into service-driven postindustrial society affected black life and culture in the city between 1900 and 1950, and it will shed light on the development of those forces that wreaked havoc in the lives of African Americans in the succeeding epoch. The book will examine the black urban experience in the northern, southern and western regions of the U.S. and will be thematically organized around the themes of work, community, city buliding, and protest. the analytic focus will be on the efforts of African Americans to find work and build communities in a constant ly changing economy and urban environments, tinged with racism,hostility, and the notions of white supremacy. Some chapters will be based on original research, while others will represent a systhesis of existing literature on that topic.

"There are a number of essays that stand out in this collection... important contributions toward understanding the prewar history and implications of the divergent economic, political, and geographic trajectories of the black middle and working classes." -- Journal of American History
"These nine first-rate essays explain why efforts to acquire social standing within middle-class America through home ownership elude the majority of black Americans...Upper-division undergraduates and above." -- Choice

ISBN: 9780815327493

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 760g

322 pages