Gary J. Kornblith, emeritus professor of history at Oberlin College, has published Slavery and Sectional Strife in the Early American Republic, 1776-1821 and Capitalism Takes Command: The Social Transformation of Nineteenth-Century America. Carol Lasser, emeritus professor of history at Oberlin College, has published Educating Men and Women Together: Coeducation in a Changing World and Antebellum American Women: Private, Public, Partisan.
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Description
In Elusive Utopia, Gary J. Kornblith and Carol Lasser provide a clear-eyed, crisply-written account of Oberlin, Ohio, from its founding in 1833 as a unique integrated community, to the 1920's, when the racial separatism that had divided the rest of the country had divided it, too. It is a fascinating all-too-American story, well-told and filled with vivid characters, both black and white.--Geoffrey C. Ward, author of Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson Oberlin was founded as an abolitionist community and college committed to an egalitarian vision of race relations. As the authors of this splendid book make clear, this vision achieved something close to reality through the 1870s but then gave way to the hardening of segregation and inequality in the Gilded Age and after. Elusive Utopia demonstrates in sterling fashion how deeply researched local history can illustrate broad national trends.--James M. McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era

