Black Citymakers

£16.09

Black Citymakers

How The Philadelphia Negro Changed Urban America

History of the Americas History Social and cultural history Urban communities Ethnic studies Sociology

Author: Marcus Anthony Hunter

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Language: English

Published by: Oxford University Press

Published on: 28th March 2013

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 6 Mb

ISBN: 9780199339778


W.E.B. DuBois and the Black Seventh Ward

W.E.B. DuBois immortalized Philadelphia's Black Seventh Ward neighborhood, one of America's oldest urban black communities, in his 1899 sociological study The Philadelphia Negro. In the century after DuBois's study, however, the district has been transformed into a largely white upper middle class neighborhood.

About Black Citymakers

Black Citymakers revisits the Black Seventh Ward, documenting a century of banking and tenement collapses, housing activism, black-led anti-urban renewal mobilization, and post-Civil Rights political change from the perspective of the Black Seventh Warders. Drawing on historical, political, and sociological research, Marcus Hunter argues that black Philadelphians were by no means mere casualties of the large scale social and political changes that altered urban dynamics across the nation after World War II.

Black Agency and Urban Change

Instead, Hunter shows that black Americans framed their own understandings of urban social change, forging dynamic inter- and intra-racial alliances that allowed them to shape their own migration from the old Black Seventh Ward to emergent black urban enclaves throughout Philadelphia. These Philadelphians were not victims forced from their homes - they were citymakers and agents of urban change.

Historical Significance

Black Citymakers explores a century of socioeconomic, cultural, and political history in the Black Seventh Ward, creating a new understanding of the political agency of black residents, leaders, and activists in twentieth-century urban change.

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