You may also like
Chicago's African American Community In Photographs
Many novels, poems, and works of nonfiction have explored Chicago's African American community and the Great Migration from the South which vastly expanded it. This short new book, "African Americans in Chicago" (2012) is part of the "Images of America" series of photographic histories which capture the nature of local American communities. I have learned much from the series about places that I have visited and places that I don't know. Born on Chicago's South Side in the Bronzeville neighborhood, author Lowell Thompson (b. 1947), worked in advertising for most of his adult life and is a lifelong resident of Chicago.
In the short introduction to the book, Thompson accurately describes what he has done: "although much of the information here is historical, this is not a history book. I see it more like an African American family album. I have tried to include the visage of the entire family, from those of the 'usual celebrated subjects' to the ones most usually ignored." Thus, photographs of famous places and community leaders in Chicago's African American community, including Robert Abbott of the Chicago Defender, Ida Wells, Jesse Jackson, Ernie Banks, Pinetop Perkins, pioneering aviator Beatrice Brown, Barack Obama, and many others appear side by side with unfamiliar individuals from the pages of family albums collected by the author. Thompson also wants to offer a positive portrayal of his subjects to counter the stereotypes that plagued American portrayals of African Americans up to the mid-1960's. He writes: "Because African American images have been so historically stereotyped, debased, distorted, or ignored, the images here act as evidence of our existence as real, dignified, positive, and sentient human beings." The book includes many photographs of artists and art studios, musicians, academics, writers, business people, and well-dressed young people and students.
Although the book begins with early Chicago and its first non-native American resident, an African American named Jean Baptiste Point DuSable, its focus is on the Great Migration, as described in Elizabeth Wilkerson's "The Warmth of Other Suns" and other books. In a chapter called "Goin' to Chicago 1", Thompson describes the first part of the Great Migration between 1915 and 1920, spearheaded by the African American newspaper, the "Chicago Defender", while in the following chapter, "Goin' to Chicago II" he describes the even larger second wave around WW II from 1940 to about 1960. The photographs emphasize the Bronzeville community where the author, as he states many times, was born and raised. As the influx of people continued through the Migration, the African American community expanded, as documented in the book. Large housing developments were constructed, which became breeding grounds for crime and poverty, and many have since been demolished. Thompson describes how in recent years, Chicago's African American community has become somewhat reduced in size, leaving many empty places. The chronological ordering in the chapters of the book is not precise and frequently shifts back and forth in time, resulting in a collage-like presentation which on occasion is confusing and repetitive.
The book draws heavily of photographs from the Works Project Administration and other archival sources, showing people and places. I learned a great deal from the photographs of Chicago's Bronzeville that no longer exists, with its banks, churches, rowhouses, nightclubs, parks, theaters, and schools. The book captures the changing rhythms of African American city life. The book emphasizes Chicago as a center of African American publishing, with the Chicago Defender and Chicago Bee newspapers and the Johnson Publishing Company,the publisher of "Ebony" and the largest African American publisher in the United States. The book makes frequent reference to Richard Wright's "Native Son" and "12 Million Black Voices". But the book that receives the most attention is "Black Metropolis" Black Metropolis, a lengthy 1945 study of Chicago's South Side by St. Clair Drake and Horace Cayton.
As Thompson says, Chicago's African American community is far too vast and complex to be covered in a 128 book of photographs. He writes that his book "cannot claim to be the full story of the incredibly deep and rich saga of African Americans in Chicago, but I have tried my best to make it a good start." Another recent book in the Images of America series, for example, is devoted to a photographic history of the "Chicago Defender" alone, as an integral part of Chicago's African American community. Chicago Defender (Images of America) Thompson's book is a good introduction but both in text and in photographs, I would like to see much more of Chicago's Bronzeville.
You may also like
The Minotaur at Calle Lanza
9781953368669
Regular price $19.95 Sale price $14.96 Save 25%A “hauntingly effective” surrealist travel memoir about the mysterious transformations that may lurk inside us all (Library Journal, starred review).
Venice, 2020. As a pandemic rages across the globe, Zito Madu finds himself in a nearly deserted city, its walls and basilicas humming with strange magic. As he wanders a haunted landscape, we see him twist further into his own past: his family’s difficult immigration from Nigeria to Detroit, his troubled relationship with his father, the sporadic joys of daily life and solitude, his experiences with migration, poverty, foreignness, racism, and his own rage and regret. But as it is with all labyrinths, after finding its center, will he come away unscathed, or will he transform into the gripping, fantastical monstrousness that’s out to consume him whole?
With nods to Italo Calvino and Jorge Luis Borges, this surrealist debut memoir takes us into the labyrinth of memory and the monsters lurking there.
The Last Children of Mill Creek
9781948742641
Regular price $18.95 Sale price $14.21 Save 25%A bestselling memoir of a vibrant childhood spent in a thriving St. Louis African American community before “urban renewal” changed everything.
Vivian Gibson grew up in Mill Creek Valley, a segregated working-class neighborhood in St. Louis that was razed in 1959 to build a highway, an act of racism disguised under urban renewal as “progress.” A moving memoir of family life at a time very different from the present, The Last Children of Mill Creek chronicles the everyday lived experiences of Gibson’s large family―her seven siblings, her crafty, college-educated mother, and her hard-working father―and the friends, shop owners, church ladies, teachers, and others who made Mill Creek into a warm, tight-knit African American community. In Gibson’s words, “This memoir is about survival, as told from the viewpoint of a watchful young girl―a collection of decidedly universal stories that chronicle the extraordinary lives of ordinary people.”
Winner of a Missouri Humanities award for literary achievement, The Last Children of Mill Creek is an important book for anyone interested in urban development, race, and community history―or for anyone who was once a child.
Praise for The Last Children of Mill Creek
2022 Missouri Author of the Year Winner
Missouri's “Great Reads from Great Places” Selection for the 2023 National Book Festival
“This is a story borne aloft by the sheer human joy of storytelling, of memory, of tender love for a mother and a father and for a vanished time and place. It is a book that, while steadfastly refusing the American fiction of color blindness, just as steadfastly refuses to portray Black life through the single warped lens of white-induced pain.” —TheLos Angeles Review of Books
Chicago House Music
9781953368737
Regular price $24.00 Sale price $18.00 Save 25%An inside look at the music born, bred, and perfected in Chicago.
Chicago house music originated in the city’s Black, gay underground in the late seventies and became one of the most popular musical genres in the world by the end of the century. In Chicago House Music: Culture and Community, Marguerite Harrold tells the story of the genre’s rise and the prolific creators who have sustained it for decades. You’ll learn about house music’s early innovators, like Ron Hardy and Frankie Knuckles, who transformed the social and political turmoil around them into a revolution in dance music. You’ll also hear remembrances from contemporary figures in the house community, like DJ Lady D, Avery R. Young, Czboogie and Edgar “Artek” Sinio, who have forged new paths as the genre has evolved. It’s a story about much more than music—it’s about a community struggling for acceptance, love, liberation, and freedom, and about the creative pioneers whose resilience helped turn house music into a worldwide phenomenon.
Full of interviews and first-hand accounts from the people who stood behind the turntables, carried crates of records, or danced until dawn, Chicago House Music is the history of an art form that continues to be a force for social interaction, spiritual liberation, and community today.
African Americans of Round Top
9781467160742
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%Round Top’s African American pioneers came into Texas in 1825 when Stephen F. Austin brought in 300 Anglo-Americans, and the people they enslaved, for the purpose of colonizing the area. Soon afterward, more slaves were bought in from other slaveholding states. After the Civil War ended, the descendants of these original Round Top pioneers began building their own community. Many earned money by toiling away in the cotton fields for the very men who had once enslaved them. Others earned money working as cowboys, washerwomen, barbers, or blacksmiths. In 1867, the group founded the Concord Missionary Baptist Church as a communal space for them to come together and pool their resources to buy their own land, build their own homes, and hire teachers, which led to the creation of the Concord Missionary Baptist Church Colored School. For generations, this school successfully educated freedmen, their children, and their descendants before finally closing its doors due to desegregation. Despite many challenges, they overcame obstacles that grew into a prosperous community.
How it Feels to be Colored Me
9781429096171
Regular price $9.95 Sale price $7.46 Save 25%
Early County Massacre, The
9781467156936
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%Author Orice Jenkins tells the full story of Ulysses Goolsby and the Early County massacre more than 100 years later. The Early County Massacre has been known as the Grandison Goolsby War for over a century, focusing on the events of December 30th, 1915, when 46-year-old Grandison used gunfire to defend himself from a lynching mob. Lesser known is that the incident started two days earlier when Grandison’s son was attacked on his way to a wedding, and that it all led to the Supreme Court of Georgia sending that same son to death row five years later.