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African American Life in the Rural South, 1900-1950 provides important new information about African American culture, social life, and religion, as well as economics, federal policy, migration, and civil rights. The essays particularly emphasize the efforts of African Americans to negotiate the white world in the southern countryside. Filling a void in southern studies, this outstanding collection provides a substantive overview of the subject. Scholars, students, and teachers of African American, southern, agricultural, and rural history will find this work invaluable. About the EditorR. Douglas Hurt is Professor and Director of the Graduate Program in Agricultural History and Rural Studies at Iowa State University in Ames. He is the author of numerous books, including Nathan Boone and the American Frontier and Agriculture and Slavery in Missouri's Little Dixie, both available from the University of Missouri Press. ContentsIntroduction
"Looking for Better All the Time": Rural Migration and
Urbanization in the South, 1900–1950
"A Crude and Raw Past": Work, Folklife, and Anti-Agrarianism in
Twentieth-Century African American Autobiography
"Of the Least and the Most": The African American Rural
Church
Shifting Boundaries: Race Relations in the Rural Jim Crow
South
African American Rural Culture, 1900–1950
Benign Public Policies, Malignant Consequences, and the Demise of
African American Agriculture
"I Have Been through Fire": Black Agricultural Extension Agents
and the Politics of Negotiation
Exit, Voice, and Loyalty: African American Strategies for Day-to-
Day Existence/Resistance in the Early-Twentieth-Century Rural
South
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