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Olga roman bernhard schlink7/7/2023 ![]() ![]() Explores the motivations of African-Americans who remained in the South in a period of mass migration, but who relocated to urban centers in the region. Way Up North in Louisville: African American Migration in the Urban South, 1930-1970 by Luther Adams (University of North Carolina Press 320 pages $49.95). ![]() Focuses on Southern migrants in a study of the black working-class women at the receiving end of urban and penal reform in early 20th-century New York. Hicks (University of North Carolina Press 372 pages $65 hardcover, $24.95 paperback). Talk With You Just Like a Woman: African American Women, Justice, and Reform in New York, 1890-1935 by Cheryl D. Essays on such topics as black women’s bodies in 1960s and 70s magazine ads, and androgyny and the self in Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon and Jamaica Kincaid’s The Autobiography of My Mother. Henderson (Palgrave Macmillan 218 pages $80). Imagining the Black Female Body: Reconciling Image in Print and Visual Culture edited by Carol E. A biography of a newspaper editor and politician, who was born in Arkansas in 1857 to a slave father and free mother, orphaned and ultimately raised in Wisconsin, and in 1904 became the first African-American “ticketed” as a party’s nominee for president. ![]() Mouser (University of Wisconsin Press 253 pages $24.95). For Labor, Race, and Liberty: George Edwin Taylor, His Historic Run for the White House, and the Making of Independent Black Politics by Bruce L. ![]()
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