Activities per year
Abstract
It is difficult, even excruciating, to imagine the staggering descent from high optimism to despondency experienced by many African Americans who lived between emancipation and the dawn of the twentieth century. For historians living in the post–civil rights era, recapturing the scale, velocity, and brutality of that dramatic fall has been hampered by two conceptual problems. The first of these, undergirded by prominent trends in the formerly “new” social history, is a widely shared enthusiasm for illuminating those hidden corners of daily life where men and women on the receiving end of Jim Crow continued to wield a degree of control. “Agency” has been the buzzword for a generation of scholarship that emphasizes the staying power and persistence of black Southerners in the face of relentless assaults on their social and economic status, their civil rights, and even, at times, their collective existence. This is, in many ways, an understandable reaction to an earlier consensus that relegated black historical initiative to the margins of a national fable cleansed of unseemly violence and sharp social conflict, but it can also be problematic.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 79-93 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | Labor: Studies in the Working-Class History of the Americas |
Volume | 7 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 01 Nov 2010 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Arts and Humanities
Fingerprint
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American Abolitionists and the Virtues of 'Free Labor': Before and After Emancipation
Kelly, B. (Presenter)
28 Mar 2008Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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A Pandora's Box of Racial Disunity: Black Workers, Black Elites and the 'Labor Question' in the Deep South, 1895-1920
Kelly, B. (Presenter)
11 Nov 2000Activity: Talk or presentation types › Oral presentation
Prizes
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Non-Residential Fellowship, WEB Du Bois Institute, Harvard University (2007-2009)
Kelly, B. (Recipient), 01 Sept 2007
Prize: Fellowship awarded competitively