The Great Migration Directory

The Great Migration Directory
Author: Robert Charles Anderson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 423
Release: 2015
Genre: British Americans
ISBN: 9780880823272

"Covering individuals not included in previous Great Migration compendia, this complete survey lists the names of all known to have come to New England during the Great Migration period, 1620-1640. Each entry provides the name of the head of household, English or European origin (if known), date of migration, principal residences in New England, and the best available sources of information for the subject" -- publisher's description.

The Great Migration Begins

The Great Migration Begins
Author: Robert Charles Anderson
Publisher: New England Historic Genealogical Society(NEHGS)
Total Pages: 1102
Release: 1995
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

Given by Eugene Edge III.

The Great Migration Begins

The Great Migration Begins
Author: Ancestry Inc
Publisher: Myfamily.Com
Total Pages:
Release: 2000-11-01
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 9781888486605

A project of NEHGS, compiled by Robert Charles Anderson. Contains more than 1,000 comprehensive sketches of early immigrants to New England with essential information gathered from a number of significant sources. Originally published in three volumes.

Chicago's New Negroes

Chicago's New Negroes
Author: Davarian L. Baldwin
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 380
Release: 2009-11-30
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0807887609

As early-twentieth-century Chicago swelled with an influx of at least 250,000 new black urban migrants, the city became a center of consumer capitalism, flourishing with professional sports, beauty shops, film production companies, recording studios, and other black cultural and communal institutions. Davarian Baldwin argues that this mass consumer marketplace generated a vibrant intellectual life and planted seeds of political dissent against the dehumanizing effects of white capitalism. Pushing the traditional boundaries of the Harlem Renaissance to new frontiers, Baldwin identifies a fresh model of urban culture rich with politics, ingenuity, and entrepreneurship. Baldwin explores an abundant archive of cultural formations where an array of white observers, black cultural producers, critics, activists, reformers, and black migrant consumers converged in what he terms a "marketplace intellectual life." Here the thoughts and lives of Madam C. J. Walker, Oscar Micheaux, Andrew "Rube" Foster, Elder Lucy Smith, Jack Johnson, and Thomas Dorsey emerge as individual expressions of a much wider spectrum of black political and intellectual possibilities. By placing consumer-based amusements alongside the more formal arenas of church and academe, Baldwin suggests important new directions for both the historical study and the constructive future of ideas and politics in American life.

Ain't Got No Home

Ain't Got No Home
Author: Erin Royston Battat
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2014
Genre: History
ISBN: 1469614022

Ain t Got No Home: America's Great Migrations and the Making of an Interracial Left"

Canaan Bound

Canaan Bound
Author: Lawrence Richard Rodgers
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1997
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780252066054

Drawing on a wide range of major literary voices, including Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, and Toni Morrison, as well as lesser-known writers such as William Attaway (Blood on the Forge) and Dorothy West (The Living Is Easy), Rodgers conducts a kind of literary archaeology of the Great Migration. He mines the writers' biographical connections to migration and teases apart the ways in which individual novels relate to one another, to the historical situation of black America, and to African-American literature as a whole. In reading migration novels in relation to African-American literary texts such as slave narratives, folk tales, and urban fiction, Rodgers affirms the southern folk roots of African-American culture and argues for a need to stem the erosion of southern memory.

The Southern Diaspora

The Southern Diaspora
Author: James Noble Gregory
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 478
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN:

Southern Diaspora: How the Great Migrations of Black and White Southerners Transformed America

The Great Exodus from China

The Great Exodus from China
Author: Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2020-09-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 1108478123

Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang examines the human exodus from China to Taiwan in 1949, focusing on trauma, memory, and identity.

Remaking Respectability

Remaking Respectability
Author: Victoria W. Wolcott
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 355
Release: 2013-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1469611007

In the early decades of the twentieth century, tens of thousands of African Americans arrived at Detroit's Michigan Central Station, part of the Great Migration of blacks who left the South seeking improved economic and political conditions in the urban North. The most visible of these migrants have been the male industrial workers who labored on the city's automobile assembly lines. African American women have largely been absent from traditional narratives of the Great Migration because they were excluded from industrial work. By placing these women at the center of her study, Victoria Wolcott reveals their vital role in shaping life in interwar Detroit. Wolcott takes us into the speakeasies, settlement houses, blues clubs, storefront churches, employment bureaus, and training centers of Prohibition- and depression-era Detroit. There, she explores the wide range of black women's experiences, focusing particularly on the interactions between working- and middle-class women. As Detroit's black population grew exponentially, women not only served as models of bourgeois respectability, but also began to reshape traditional standards of deportment in response to the new realities of their lives. In so doing, Wolcott says, they helped transform black politics and culture. Eventually, as the depression arrived, female respectability as a central symbol of reform was supplanted by a more strident working-class activism.