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Segregation in the New South

Birmingham, Alabama, 1871–1901

Carl V. Harris

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Belletristik / Hauptwerk vor 1945

Beschreibung

Carl V. Harris’s Segregation in the New South, completed and edited by W. Elliot Brownlee, explores the rise of racial exclusion in late nineteenth-century Birmingham, Alabama. In the 1870s, African Americans in this crucial southern industrial city were eager to exploit the disarray of slavery’s old racial lines, assert their new autonomy, and advance toward full equality. However, most southern whites worked to restore the restrictive racial lines of the antebellum South or invent new ones that would guarantee the subordination of Black residents. From Birmingham’s founding in 1871, color lines divided the city, and as its people strove to erase the lines or fortify them, they shaped their futures in fateful ways.

Social segregation is at the center of Harris’s history. He shows that from the beginning of Reconstruction southern whites engaged in a comprehensive program of assigning social dishonor to African Americans—the same kind of dishonor that whites of the Old South had imposed on Black people while enslaving them. In the process, southern whites engaged in constructing the meaning of race in the New South.

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Schlagwörter

New South Creed, Promise of the New South, reform, progressivism, Magic City, boosterism, steel, migration, C. Vann Woodward, racism, Black, Strange Career of Jim Crow, Origins of the New South, industrialization, Edward Ayers, demographics