African Americans in the Post-Emancipation South: The Outsiders' View

African Americans in the Post-Emancipation South: The Outsiders' View

by Alton Hornsby Jr.
African Americans in the Post-Emancipation South: The Outsiders' View

African Americans in the Post-Emancipation South: The Outsiders' View

by Alton Hornsby Jr.

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Overview

Historians and other scholars often use first-hand accounts, including contemporary observations, as sources for study of the past. These types of sources are valuable, especially when used in conjunction with other documents, as they help us to approximate the past. This study uses these types of sources to attain glimpses of African American life in the post-emancipation South. Spanning from the 1860s through the New Deal, this study incorporates a broad cross-section of the views of European travelers and Euro-American visitors from the North, based upon travel books as well as articles and essays from periodicals and scholarly journals. The study synthesizes the outsiders' observations and assesses their summaries' overall validity for increasing our understanding of the lives of blacks in the post-emancipation South. Furthermore, these accounts allow for a reconstruction of African American life and labor in the major aspects of black culture—religion, education, politics, criminal justice, employment and entrepreneurship, social life and status—of the times. The work is constructed in the context of contemporary anthropology, ethnography, psychology, and sociology.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780761851066
Publisher: University Press of America
Publication date: 12/22/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 190
File size: 268 KB

About the Author

Alton Hornsby, Jr. is Fuller E. Callaway Professor of History at Morehouse College and former editor of the Journal of Negro History. He is also the editor of Wiley-Blackwell's Companion to African American History. His most recent work is Black Power in Dixie: A Political History of African Americans in Atlanta.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Acknowledgements
Chapter 3 Introduction
Chapter 4 I. Appearances
Chapter 5 II. The Opportunity to Earn a Dollar
Chapter 6 III. Pray, Shout, and Sing
Chapter 7 IV. Pedagogs and Pupils
Chapter 8 V. "In All Things Social"
Chapter 9 VI. Manners and Morals
Chapter 10 VII. Political Participation
Chapter 11 Epilogue
Chapter 12 Bibliography
Chapter 13 About the Author
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