Description: Please refer to the section BELOW (and NOT ABOVE) this line for the product details - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Title:Before Harlem: The Black Experience In New York City Before World War IISBN13:9780812239614ISBN10:081223961XAuthor:Sacks, Marcy S. (Author)Description:In The Years Between 1880 And 1915, New York City And Its Environs Underwent A Tremendous Demographic Transformation With The Arrival Of Millions Of European Immigrants, Native Whites From The Rural Countryside, And People Of African Descent From Both The American South And The Caribbean While All Groups Faced Challenges In Their Adjustment To The City, Hardening Racial Prejudices Set The Black Experience Apart From That Of Other Newcomers Through Encounters With Each Other, Blacks And Whites, Both Together And In Opposition, Forged The Contours Of Race Relations That Would Affect The City For Decades To Come Before Harlem Reveals How Black Migrants And Immigrants To New York Entered A World Far Less Welcoming Than The One They Had Expected To Find White Police Officers, Urban Reformers, And Neighbors Faced Off In A Hostile Environment That Threatened Black Families In Multiple Ways Unlike European Immigrants, Who Typically Struggled With Low-Paying Jobs But Who Often Saw Their Children Move Up The Economic Ladder, Black People Had Limited Employment Opportunities That Left Them With Almost No Prospects Of Upward Mobility Their Poverty And The Vagaries Of A Restrictive Job Market Forced Unprecedented Numbers Of Black Women Into The Labor Force, Fundamentally Affecting Child-Rearing Practices And Marital Relationships Despite Hostile Conditions, Black People Nevertheless Claimed New York City As Their Own Within Their Neighborhoods And Their Churches, Their Night Clubs And Their Fraternal Organizations, They Forged Discrete Ethnic, Regional, And Religious Communities Diverse In Their Backgrounds, Languages, And Customs, Black New Yorkers Cultivated Connections To Others Similar To Themselves, Forming Organizations, Support Networks, And Bonds Of Friendship With Former Strangers In Doing So, Marcy S Sacks Argues, They Established A Dynamic World That Eventually Sparked The Harlem Renaissance By The 1920S, Harlem Had Become Both A Tragedy And A Triumph--Undeniably A Ghetto Replete With Problems Of Poverty, Overcrowding, And Crime, But Also A Refuge And A Haven, A Physical Place Whose Very Name Became Legendary Binding:Hardcover, HardcoverPublisher:University of Pennsylvania PressPublication Date:2006-10-12Weight:1.15 lbsDimensions:0.9'' H x 9.1'' L x 6.1'' WNumber of Pages:240Language:English
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Book Title: Before Harlem: The Black Experience In New York City Before ...
Item Length: 9in
Item Height: 0.6in
Item Width: 6in
Author: Marcy S. Sacks
Publication Name: Before Harlem : the Black Experience in New York City before World War I
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Year: 2006
Series: Politics and Culture in Modern America Ser.
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 23.5 Oz
Number of Pages: 240 Pages