South Side Girls: Growing Up in the Great Migration

Author:   Marcia Chatelain
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9780822358480


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   26 March 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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South Side Girls: Growing Up in the Great Migration


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Full Product Details

Author:   Marcia Chatelain
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.499kg
ISBN:  

9780822358480


ISBN 10:   0822358484
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   26 March 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Preface  ix Acknowledgments  xiii Introduction. I Will Thank You with All My Heart: Girls and the Great Migration  1 1. Do You See That Girl? The Dependent, the Destitute, and the Delinquent Black Girl  19 2. Modesty on Her Cheek: Girls and Great Migration Marketplaces  59 3. The Possibilities of the Negro Girl: Black Girls and the Great Depression  96 4. Did I Do Right? The Black Girl Citizen  130 Conclusion. She Was Fighting for Her Father's Freedom: Girls after the Great Migration  167 Notes  175 Bibliography  215 Index  233

Reviews

South Side Girls captures the promise and peril of Migration-era Chicago while adding nuance to our understanding of how Progressive reformers approached their subjects. Taking a long view from the nadir of Jim Crow to the cusp of the postwar civil rights movement, Marcia Chatelain explores how black girls shouldered much of the burden of both black aspiration and reformers' mistrust. --Adriane Lentz-Smith, author of Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I


In this singular contribution to our understanding of the Great Migration, Marcia Chatelain approaches the historical archives with an entirely new question, 'is there a girlhood for those who will grow into black women?' South Side Girls is a perfect book for a moment when we struggle with the twin realities of the extraordinary girlhoods of the Obama daughters and the violent brevity of the girlhood of Renisha McBride; as we watch a new generation of child migrants fleeing violence in central America and question our national response even as three generations of South Side Girls live in the White House. -- Melissa V. Harris-Perry, author of Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America South Side Girls captures the promise and peril of Migration-era Chicago while adding nuance to our understanding of how Progressive reformers approached their subjects. Taking a long view from the nadir of Jim Crow to the cusp of the postwar civil rights movement, Marcia Chatelain explores how black girls shouldered much of the burden of both black aspiration and reformers' mistrust. -- Adriane Lentz-Smith, author of Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I This engaging read deftly examines the experiences of African American girls and young women as they undertook the vast emotional and physical paradigm shifts of the Great Migration era, with a specific geographical focus on migrants to the South Side of Chicago... Recommended for civil rights, gender and women's studies, environmental, and social science scholars. -- Jewell Anderson Library Journal [N]otable for its flowing attention-holding writing... Included are many entertaining stories the author has plumbed from diaries, African American newspapers, and archives. -- Karl Helicher Foreword Reviews Referencing girls' letters and interviews, Chatelain shares these unknown stories (enhanced by 13 images) and thus offers a glimpse into this understudied population to the Great Migration's complex narrative. -- Bobbi Booker Philadelphia Tribune Many scholars have studied the great migration of African Americans from the South to the North. Most often, the subject focuses on men. Chatelain asks 'What about girls?' ... An excellent companion to works such as James Grossman's Land of Hope and Nicholas Lemann's The Promised Land. Highly recommended. All public and academic levels/libraries. -- W. Glasker Choice Chatelain exhibits a particularly deft reading for the girls' voices. ... In writing that is accessible and conceptually generative, [she] demonstrate[s] not only that black girls existed, but that they mattered-an important challenge to the implicit and ongoing view that girlhood is a whites-only space. -- Tamara Beauboeuf-Lafontant Women's Review of Books South Side Girls renders a fascinating interpretation of the African American migration. Marcia Chatelain has produced an engaging study that challenges historians to re-conceptualize ideas about urban migration, African American reform, and black girls' thoughts about family and community, consumer culture, and religion... South Side Girls is an innovative work that illuminates the voices and narratives of a dynamic group of underrepresented urban citizens: black girls. -- LaShawn Harris American Studies [An] elegantly-written monograph about African American girls seeking education, autonomy, and opportunity in early and mid-twentieth century Chicago... In South Side Girls, Chatelain has made important contributions to existing scholarship about Chicago, the Great Migration, African American and women's history, and the rapidly developing, dynamic field of girlhood studies. -- Holly M. Kent Journal of Illinois History Marcia Chatelain's South Side Girls offers an intriguing and unique view of black girls in Chicago during the Great Migration from 1910 to 1940. -- Dionne Danns American Historical Review Chatelain makes creative use of sources as she searches for and finds black girls who have been invisible and unaccounted for in previous histories of the Great Migration... South Side Girls ... demonstrate[s] the ways that consideration of black girls' experiences provides richer and more nuanced historical narratives ... [and] provide[s] important context and foundation for the conceptions of black girlhood that we have inherited. -- Farah Jasmine Griffin Public Books Marcia Chatelain's South Side Girls focuses on the lives of young African Americans who left direct and indirect traces in the archives-in interviews and through their interaction with institutions. Chatelain makes a major contribution by engaging black girls' experiences, not just academic conceptions of black girlhood. Indeed, she critiques American society and African American communities for being more interested in black girlhood than with the quality of black girls' lives. -- Koritha Mitchell Journal of American History


[N]otable for its flowing attention-holding writing. . . . Included are many entertaining stories the author has plumbed from diaries, African American newspapers, and archives. --Karl Helicher Foreword Reviews


In this singular contribution to our understanding of the Great Migration, Marcia Chatelain approaches the historical archives with an entirely new question, 'is there a girlhood for those who will grow into black women?' South Side Girls is a perfect book for a moment when we struggle with the twin realities of the extraordinary girlhoods of the Obama daughters and the violent brevity of the girlhood of Renisha McBride; as we watch a new generation of child migrants fleeing violence in central America and question our national response even as three generations of South Side Girls live in the White House. -- Melissa V. Harris-Perry, author of Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America South Side Girls captures the promise and peril of Migration-era Chicago while adding nuance to our understanding of how Progressive reformers approached their subjects. Taking a long view from the nadir of Jim Crow to the cusp of the postwar civil rights movement, Marcia Chatelain explores how black girls shouldered much of the burden of both black aspiration and reformers' mistrust. -- Adriane Lentz-Smith, author of Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I This engaging read deftly examines the experiences of African American girls and young women as they undertook the vast emotional and physical paradigm shifts of the Great Migration era, with a specific geographical focus on migrants to the South Side of Chicago... Recommended for civil rights, gender and women's studies, environmental, and social science scholars. -- Jewell Anderson Library Journal [N]otable for its flowing attention-holding writing... Included are many entertaining stories the author has plumbed from diaries, African American newspapers, and archives. -- Karl Helicher Foreword Reviews Referencing girls' letters and interviews, Chatelain shares these unknown stories (enhanced by 13 images) and thus offers a glimpse into this understudied population to the Great Migration's complex narrative. -- Bobbi Booker Philadelphia Tribune Many scholars have studied the great migration of African Americans from the South to the North. Most often, the subject focuses on men. Chatelain asks 'What about girls?' ... An excellent companion to works such as James Grossman's Land of Hope and Nicholas Lemann's The Promised Land. Highly recommended. All public and academic levels/libraries. -- W. Glasker Choice Chatelain exhibits a particularly deft reading for the girls' voices. ... In writing that is accessible and conceptually generative, [she] demonstrate[s] not only that black girls existed, but that they mattered-an important challenge to the implicit and ongoing view that girlhood is a whites-only space. -- Tamara Beauboeuf-Lafontant Women's Review of Books South Side Girls renders a fascinating interpretation of the African American migration. Marcia Chatelain has produced an engaging study that challenges historians to re-conceptualize ideas about urban migration, African American reform, and black girls' thoughts about family and community, consumer culture, and religion... South Side Girls is an innovative work that illuminates the voices and narratives of a dynamic group of underrepresented urban citizens: black girls. -- LaShawn Harris American Studies


In this singular contribution to our understanding of the Great Migration, Marcia Chatelain approaches the historical archives with an entirely new question, 'is there a girlhood for those who will grow into black women?' South Side Girls is a perfect book for a moment when we struggle with the twin realities of the extraordinary girlhoods of the Obama daughters and violent brevity of the girlhood of Renisha McBride; as we watch a new generation of child migrants fleeing violence in central America and question our national response even as three generations of South Side Girls live in the White House. --Melissa V. Harris-Perry, author of Sister Citizen: Shame, Stereotypes, and Black Women in America


Author Information

Marcia Chatelain is Assistant Professor of History at Georgetown University.

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