Chinua Thelwell is assistant professor of history and Africana studies at William & Mary.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
PrefaceIntroduction Chapter 1. Foundations: Blackface Minstrelsy in the United States and across the British Empire, 1830-1862 Chapter 2.An Empire of Burnt Cork: Blackface Minstrelsy in Pre-Industrial South Africa, 1862-1872 Chapter 3. Diamonds, Dandies, and Dispossession: Minstrel Shows During the South African Mineral Revolution, 1872-1889 Chapter 4. Toward a ""Modernizing"" Hybridity: McAdoo's Jubilee Singers, McAdoo's Minstrels, and Racial Uplift Politics, 1890-1898 Chapter 5. Brown-on-Black Masquerade: Cape Town's Coon Carnival Conclusion. ATransatlantic Story of Burnt Cork Nationalism Afterword Global Blackface: Toward Transnational Minstrelsy StudiesSources Cited
"The legacies of blackface minstrelsy extend beyond the decades exquisitely analyzed by Thelwell, and, if the past is prologue, Exporting Jim Crow is required reading for anyone committed to social justice."--Kate Mattingly, Dance Chronicle "Historical in nature and based on archival research and an extensive reading of historiography about blackface minstrelsy and racial and labor relations in South Africa, Exporting Jim Crow charts the importance of minstrelsy in forging a distinctive white settler identity in South Africa."--Kevin K. Gaines, author of African Americans in Ghana: Black Expatriates and the Civil Rights Era "Thelwell's scholarship is impressive. This is essential reading for those interested in the transnational reach of blackface minstrelsy."--Sandra Jean Graham, author of Spirituals and the Birth of a Black Entertainment Industry

