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The Social Origins of the Urban South: Race, Gender, and Migration in Nashville and Middle Tennessee, 1890-1930

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Description

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, millions of black and white southerners left farms and rural towns to check out their fate in the region’s cities. This transition brought about significant economic, social, and cultural changes in both urban centers and the countryside. That specialize in Nashville and its Middle Tennessee hinterland, Louis Kyriakoudes explores the impetus for this migration and illuminates its effects on regional development.

Kyriakoudes argues that increased rural-to-urban migration in the late nineteenth century grew out of older seasonal and circular migration patterns long employed by southern farm families. These mobility patterns grew more urban-oriented and more permanent as rural blacks and whites turned an increasing number of to urban migration to be able to take care of rapid economic and social change.

The urban economy was once particularly welcoming to women, offering freedom from the male authority that dominated rural life. African Americans did not find the same freedoms, then again, as whites found how you can harness the forces of modernization to deny them get right of entry to to economic and social opportunity. By linking urbanization, economic and social change, and popular cultural institutions, Kyriakoudes lends insight into the development of an urban, white, working-class identity that reinforced racial divisions and laid the demographic and social foundations for today’s up to date, urban South.

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