Fr. 43.10

Geography of Hate - The Great Migration Through Small-Town America

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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"The Geography of Hate locates the Midwest as a critical site of inquiry and addresses how space, race, and culture intersect in ways that have historically reinforced civic and geographical borders for racial and ethnic minorities. Considering small-town America in the narrative about the Great Migration, Jennifer Sdunzik uncovers a plethora of mechanisms, practices, and attitudes of exclusion prevalent in the small-town Midwest that actively prevented a more dispersed African American population across the region. To expand the conversation of southern black migrants' exclusive destination desires beyond the urban North, she centralizes the midwestern state of Indiana as one important state along the Great Migration corridor for two reasons. This geographic focus allows for an emphasis of black experiences and contributions in small-town America while enabling an in-depth exploration of white acts and actions that curbed, prevented, and erased a black presence in their midst. Interrogating state and communal histories since their inceptions and providing analyses of population data, print media, archival, spatial and ethnographic materials, Sdunzik develops the concept of the "geography of hate" as a theoretical framework and visual manifestation of exclusion and violence. By spatializing and making visible the surreptitious and mainly hidden mechanisms of whiteness, The Geography of Hate provides a fascinating account of how terror and exclusion were cleansed from historical memory"--

List of contents










Preface Introduction: How White Desires Determine the Fate of the Great Migration in America’s Heartland

  1. Manifesting White Indiana
  2. Crossroads of Desires
  3. Erasing Histories: A Black Church and a White Pool
  4. Silencing Memories: White Desires and Black Terror
  5. When Black Folk Make the Record
Conclusion: The Geography of HateMapping Whiteness Notes Bibliography Index


About the author










Jennifer Sdunzik is a postdoctoral research associate at the Evaluation and Learning Research Center at Purdue University.

Product details

Authors Jennifer Sdunzik
Publisher University Of Illinois Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 10.01.2024
 
EAN 9780252087547
ISBN 978-0-252-08754-7
No. of pages 240
Subjects Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous
Social sciences, law, business > Ethnology > Folklore

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