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Bestseller
BestsellerE-book
Author Glazier, Jack.

Title Been coming through some hard times : race, history, and memory in western Kentucky / Jack Glazier.

Publication Info. Knoxville : University of Tennessee Press, [2012]
©2012

Item Status

Edition 1st ed.
Description 1 online resource (xviii, 278 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates) : illustrations, facsimiles, map, portraits
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 251-264) and index.
Contents County and town : race and a usable past -- Slavery, the terror of imagination, and exiled freedom in Liberia -- Inscriptions of freedom : the making of an African American community -- Free but not equal -- The enactment of memory : monuments, cemeteries, reunions -- Civil rights and beyond.
Summary & ldquo;This book is a unique study of race and racism across two centuries in the hinterland of the upper South. Its implications are at once depressingly familiar and distinctly fresh. & rdquo; & mdash;W. Fitzhugh Brundage, author of Lynching in the New South: Georgia and Virginia, 1880 & ndash;1930 From the earliest days when slaves were brought to western Kentucky, the descendants of both slaves and slave owners in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, have continued to inhabit the same social and historic space. Part ethnography and part historical narrative, Been Coming through Some Hard Times offers a penetrating look at this southern town and the surrounding counties, delving particularly into the ways in which its inhabitants have remembered and publicly represented race relations in their community. Neither Deep South nor Appalachian, this western Kentucky borderland presented unique opportunities for African American communities and also deep, lasting tensions with powerful whites. Glazier conducted fieldwork in Hopkinsville for some ten months, examining historical evidence, oral histories, and the racialized hierarchy found in the final resting places of black and white citizens. His analysis shows how structural inequality continues to prevail in Hopkinsville. The book & rsquo;s ethnographic vignettes of worship services, school policy disputes, segregated cemeteries, a & ldquo;dressing like our ancestors & rdquo; day at an elementary school, and black family reunions poignantly illustrate the ongoing debate over the public control of memory. Ultimately, the book critiques the lethargy of white Americans who still fail to recognize the persistence of white privilege and therefore stunt the development of a truly multicultural society. Glazier & rsquo;s personal investment in this subject is clear. Been Coming through Some Hard Times began as an exploration of the life of James Bass, an African American who settled in Hopkinsville in 1890 and whose daughter, Idella Bass, cared for Glazier as a child. Her remarkable life profoundly influenced Glazier and led him to investigate her family & rsquo;s roots in the town. This personal dimension makes Glazier & rsquo;s ethnohistorical account especially nuanced and moving. Here is a uniquely revealing look at how the racial injustices of the past impinge quietly but insidiously upon the present in a distinctive, understudied region. JACK GLAZIER is a professor of anthropology at Oberlin College. He is the author of Dispersing the Ghetto: The Relocation of Jewish Immigrants across America and Land and the Uses of Tradition among the Mbeere of Kenya.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Hopkinsville (Ky.) -- Race relations -- History.
Racism -- Kentucky -- Hopkinsville -- History.
Racism.
Kentucky -- Hopkinsville.
History.
Collective memory -- Kentucky -- Hopkinsville.
Collective memory.
African Americans -- Kentucky -- Hopkinsville -- History.
African Americans.
White people -- Kentucky -- Hopkinsville -- History.
White people.
Christian County (Ky.) -- Race relations -- History.
Racism -- Kentucky -- Christian County -- History.
Kentucky -- Christian County.
Collective memory -- Kentucky -- Christian County.
African Americans -- Kentucky -- Christian County -- History.
White people -- Kentucky -- Christian County -- History.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
History.
Subject Racism.
Genre/Form Festschriften.
Festschriften.
Other Form: Print version: Glazier, Jack. Been coming through some hard times. 1st ed. Knoxville : University of Tennessee Press, ©2012 9781572339156 (DLC) 2012028808 (OCoLC)795173890
ISBN 9781572339781 (electronic book)
1572339780 (electronic book)
9781572339156
1572339152
9781299384651
129938465X