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- Title
RENT PARTIES, OLD SETTLERS AND JITTERBUGS: THE EVERYDAY LIFE OF AFRICAN AMERICANS AFTER THEIR EXODUS TO NORTHERN CITIES AS PRESERVED IN ORAL HISTORIES, 1917-1945.
- Authors
Mamczur, Patryk
- Abstract
The author aims to portray the Great African-American Migration by showing the everyday life of the migrants. Starting from presenting the different ways of migrating North, he later describes conditions in which the migrants lived in the Northern cities, relationships with their non-Black neighbours and with the so-called Old Settlers (meaning African Americans who had lived in the North before the Great Migration), their economic struggle, ways of overcoming the problems, as well as the distinctive culture which the migrants eventually developed, and the ferment which these cultural changes created in the whole American society. The narration is based mostly on the oral histories collected from numerous Northern cities: Albany (New York), Chicago (Illinois), Cincinnati (Ohio), Cleveland (Ohio), Detroit (Michigan), Milwaukee (Wisconsin) and New York (New York).
- Subjects
ORAL history; EVERYDAY life; GREAT Migration, 1910-1970; SOCIAL change; RENT; MICHIGAN state history; AFRICAN Americans; AFRICAN American women
- Publication
History Notebooks / Prace Historyczne, 2019, Vol 146, Issue 3, p535
- ISSN
0083-4351
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.4467/20844069PH.19.030.10384