The Harlan Renaissance

WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781952271212

Stories of Black Life in Appalachian Coal Towns

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By William H. Turner
Imprint:
WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
201 x 128 mm
Weight:
550 g
Pages:
392

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Description

William H. Turner is a sociologist now based near Houston, Texas. He received a lifetime of service award from the Appalachian Studies Association in 2009, which joined other career highlights that include induction into the Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame.

Foreword by Loyal Jones Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Alex Haley-The Taproot 2. Between Alex Haley, W. E. B. Du Bois, Ed Cabbell, and the Affrilachian Poets 3. Black Mountain Mantrips and Woman Trips 4. What's in a Name? 5. Black Folk Done Lost Their Stuff 6. The Common Narrative of Black Appalachian Coal-Camp Families 7. Blacks Moving between Central Alabama and Central Appalachia 8. Close-Knit Central Appalachian Coal-Camp Black Communities 9. On Trash-Talking and Signifying along Looney Creek 10. In a Coal Mine, Everybody Is Black; Outside, Not So Much 11. School Integration Was Worse than a Kick in the Head by an Alabama Mule 12. The Principal of the White School Became a Lifelong Friend 13. Not Bad for Some Colored Kids from Harlan County, Kentucky 14. King Coal Leaves the Throne 15. The Graying of the Eastern Kentucky Social Club 16. Meditating on the Future at the Mountaintop Notes Index

"It's a book only Turner could write, and without it, this slice of American culture would be lost forever." Berea College Magazine "One of the oldest and most enduring myths about the Appalachian Mountains is that they are now and always have been overwhelmingly populated by white Scots-Irish. Dr. William H. Turner has written a new book, The Harlan Renaissance: Stories of Black Life in Appalachian Coal Towns, that kills that myth about whiteness and, for good measure, buries several more myths as well." Daily Yonder "Heartfelt portraits that are original, compelling, revelatory, and deeply human." ???????David Ritz, author of Respect: The Life of Aretha Franklin "A warm and insightful memoir of Black life in Appalachia's coal camps that offers a bounty of correctives to the persistent myth that all mountain people are white and all poverty is self-made." Elizabeth Catte, author of What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia and Pure America: Eugenics and the Making of Modern Virginia

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