Austrian Post 5.99 DPD courier 6.49 GLS courier 4.49

Language EnglishEnglish
Book Paperback
Book Stylin' Shane White
Libristo code: 04707667
Publishers Cornell University Press, February 1999
Two Australian historians (brothers, incidentally) from the University of Sydney examine the ways in... Full description
? points 121 b
51.05 včetně DPH
In stock at our supplier Shipping in 9-12 days
Austria Delivery to Austria

30-day return policy


You might also be interested in


Pro Windows Server AppFabric Stephen Kaufman / Paperback
common.buy 68.07
Transparency and Conspiracy Henry W. West / Paperback
common.buy 34.46
Advertising Clocks: Americas Timeless Heritage Michael Bruner / Paperback
common.buy 27.39
Methodologies for Intelligent Systems Jan Komorowski / Paperback
common.buy 68.07
Power, Prestige and Bilingualism Anne-Marie De Mejia / Paperback
common.buy 49.12
Plan B für die Liebe, 1 DVD Priscilla Nedd-Friendly / DVD
common.buy 11.76
Textsorten und Systemtheorie Christina Gansel / Hardback
common.buy 64.23
MacGregor John Mackay / Paperback
common.buy 5.23
Synchronized Factories Juan S. Blyde / Paperback
common.buy 74.06
Omega Experience Augusto Veroni / Hardback
common.buy 124.69

Two Australian historians (brothers, incidentally) from the University of Sydney examine the ways in which black style has been interpreted and the political and social implications it has carried from slavery to WW II. African-American history has been written on the black body in a variety of ways, many of them cruel and inhuman. Slaves were branded, had their ears cropped, were whipped mercilessly. A slave's body was not his/her own property in the most literal sense, but as the Whites observe in this engrossing volume, there were many ways in which they could assert some small measure of independence. Focusing on such variegated indicators of black style as dress, hair, body language, and dance, the authors reveal an evolving semiotics of black self-creation that has been designed from its very outset to impose a degree of individuality on the numbing uniformity bred of slavery, poverty, Jim Crow laws, and white racism. In the first half of the book, which is concerned with the period before emancipation, the authors draw creatively on a multitude of sources - ranging from the memoirs and diaries of travelers in the South to handbills advertising rewards for the capture of runaway slaves - to recreate a largely forgotten aspect of black daily life. This volume represents an excellent example of how to use the most unlikely materials, such as newspaper-sponsored beauty pageants from the '20s, to examine how a people's culture defines its values in the face of oppression. Although the book is occasionally a bit repetitive in the early going, as its authors seek to build a case with somewhat slender evidence, it is well written and intelligently argued. It even has that rarity of rarities in a university press book: a preface that is delightfully funny. A highly useful contribution to black history from an unexpected direction, in every sense of that phrase. (Kirkus Reviews)

Login

Log in to your account. Don't have a Libristo account? Create one now!

 
mandatory
mandatory

Don’t have an account? Discover the benefits of having a Libristo account!

With a Libristo account, you'll have everything under control.

Create a Libristo account