When Franklin Roosevelt was elected president in 1932, Atlanta had the South's largest population of college-educated African Americans. The dictates of Jim Crow meant that these men and women were almost entirely excluded from public life, but as Karen F
65 Seeking “to share” her racial pride “with everyone,” Mason told an interviewer that “the play was not written for blacks only,” so its “universality was illuminated” for all audiences.66 Similarly, Lee sought to improve the “image” ...
Black Republicans and the Transformation of the GOP marshals an impressive amount of archival material at the national, state, and municipal levels in the South, Midwest, and West, as well as in the better-known Northeast, to open up new ...
For more than a century, the city of Atlanta has been associated with black achievement in education, business, politics, media, and music, earning it the nickname "the black Mecca." Atlanta's...
“Reform” sheriff Thomas R. Middleton employed as deputies thirty-seven former convicts, who had committed an assortment of felonies, including murder, manslaughter, robbery, burglary, and grand larceny. From 1934 to 1937 Middleton ...
Black women have a long history of collective struggle to create welfare organizations, schools, orphanages, and health centers for African Americans. Their clubs evolved for many reasons, including self-education, community...
Develops an alternative framework for describing and explaining African American politics and the American political system and applies it to a number of case studies.Few scholars have influenced the development...
Party strategists are steeped in the work. "The Blacks wrote the book on how academic political science can illuminate practical politics," says Republican pollster Whit Ayers.
"Offers a much needed discussion of racial politics in the premier New South city. Readers will discover that courageous struggles for justice, as much as compromise, have marked the so-called...
This is exactly what Hunter and Robinson achieve in Chocolate Cities.
Chicago Crusader, June 13, July 4, 1992; Chicago Defender, October 15, 1992; John R. Coyne Jr., “Women ofthe Year?,” National Review, September 14, 1992, 24, 26. 66. Chicago Crusader, September 5, 1992; Chicago Defender, October 15, ...