The Kings of Mississippi : race, religious education, and the making of a middle-class black family in the segregated South / Sandra L. Barnes, Benita Blanford-Jones.
Material type: TextSeries: Cambridge studies in stratification economicsPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2019Description: 1 online resource (ix, 246 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781108539654 (ebook)
- 306.85/0899607307620904 23
- E185.93.M6 B36 2019
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 13 Mar 2019).
Introduction: a black family from Mississippi as a socio-ecological phenomenon -- "My own land and a milk cow": race, space, class, and gender as embedded elements of a black southern terrain -- "Bikes or lights": familial decisions in the context of inequality -- "Getting to the school on time": formal education and beyond -- "Jesus and the juke joint": blurred and bordered boundaries and boundary crossing -- "Keeping God's favor": contemporary black families and systemic change -- Conclusion: "what would Big Mama do?" Activation and routinization of a black family's ethos.
Kings of Mississippi examines how a twentieth-century black middle-class family navigated life in rural Mississippi. The book introduces seven generations of a farming family and provides an organic examination of how the family experienced life and economic challenges as one of few middle-class black families living and working alongside the many struggling black and white sharecroppers and farmers in Gallman, Mississippi. Family narratives and census data across time and a socio-ecological lens help assess how race, religion, education, and key employment options influenced economic and non-economic outcomes. Family voices explain how intangible beliefs fueled socioeconomic outcomes despite racial, gender, and economic stratification. The book also examines the effects of stratification changes across time, including: post-migration; inter- and intra-racial conflicts and compromises; and, strategic decisions and outcomes. The book provides an unexpected glimpse at how a family's ethos can foster upward mobility into the middle-class.
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