This is a delightful book. Using the words of over two dozen individual residents of Pearl City, Florida, the authors have put together a group autobiography with both historical and sociological significance. A brief introduction provides background and methodology, and two final chapters by Evans and Lee provide analytical insights and theoretical perspectives on questions of history, sociology and social geography
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Abrahams has selected this collection of tales concerning the experiences of African-Americans durin...
Review of: A Black Odyssey: John Lewis Waller and the Promise of American Life, 1878-1900. Woods, Ra...
Book review of Isabel Wilkerson, The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America\u27s Great Migr...
The marvelous narrative ability of Carlos Fuentes has already been discovered by the many readers of...
Except for books such as The Negro Cowboys, the African American West remains an enigma to most Amer...
In this children\u27s explanatory tale, Fox persuades Mole to go to the moon on a braided grass rope...
The search for an untouched Native voice in American Indian autobiography, both experientially and...
Review of: All Our Yesterdays: A Century of Family Life in an American Small Town. Robertson, James ...
In putting together Island Sounds in the Global City: Caribbean Popular Music and Identity in New Yo...
How do we ever own our history? How do we ever come to grips with our fairy tales of that history? H...
Attitudes towards specific racial minorities have been central to the history of the United States. ...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...
Journey Toward Hope is a welcome volume on blacks west of the Mississippi. The author has effectivel...
The history of black people in Oklahoma is both typical and atypical of the black experience in Amer...
Marina E. Espina\u27s Filipinos in Louisiana is her long awaited, first collection; it is also an an...
Abrahams has selected this collection of tales concerning the experiences of African-Americans durin...
Review of: A Black Odyssey: John Lewis Waller and the Promise of American Life, 1878-1900. Woods, Ra...
Book review of Isabel Wilkerson, The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America\u27s Great Migr...
The marvelous narrative ability of Carlos Fuentes has already been discovered by the many readers of...
Except for books such as The Negro Cowboys, the African American West remains an enigma to most Amer...
In this children\u27s explanatory tale, Fox persuades Mole to go to the moon on a braided grass rope...
The search for an untouched Native voice in American Indian autobiography, both experientially and...
Review of: All Our Yesterdays: A Century of Family Life in an American Small Town. Robertson, James ...
In putting together Island Sounds in the Global City: Caribbean Popular Music and Identity in New Yo...
How do we ever own our history? How do we ever come to grips with our fairy tales of that history? H...
Attitudes towards specific racial minorities have been central to the history of the United States. ...
An Alabaman by birth, James Ward Lee is well positioned to understand a basic fallacy about Texas\u2...
Journey Toward Hope is a welcome volume on blacks west of the Mississippi. The author has effectivel...
The history of black people in Oklahoma is both typical and atypical of the black experience in Amer...
Marina E. Espina\u27s Filipinos in Louisiana is her long awaited, first collection; it is also an an...
Abrahams has selected this collection of tales concerning the experiences of African-Americans durin...