仍在寻找:镀金时代和进步时代黑人家庭对平等和认可的追求

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1017/S1537781422000536
Albert S. Broussard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要历史学家正确地将镀金时代和进步时代解释为非裔美国人面临着前所未有的暴力、选举权的大幅下降和许多公民权利的丧失。然而,从非裔美国人家庭的角度来看,这些年要复杂得多,他们试图通过教育增强自己的能力,在白领职业(如教师)中获得就业,并通过包括妇女俱乐部和民权组织在内的种族改善团体努力提升自己。然而,一些中产阶级黑人家庭,如Stewarts一家,不仅拒绝了白人社会普遍认为黑人在种族上低人一等,无法进步的信念。他们还将移民视为推进个人职业生涯和提升种族地位的建设性战略。在一个大多数黑人工人识字率最低、从事非技术性卑微工作的时代,T.McCants Stewart和他的孩子们都毕业于大学或专业学校,从事白领或专业工作,为下一代铺平了道路。然而,每个人都明白,吉姆·克劳南方以外的移民,包括非洲、美属维尔京群岛和夏威夷领土的移民,是他们成功的关键。因此,Stewarts一家构建了一个关于自由和机会的新愿景,并相信即使在镀金时代和进步时代对黑人施加了压迫性条件,他们也有成长的空间和推进职业生涯的机会。因此,应该重新考虑移民问题,将其视为一些黑人家庭为在美国社会中找到自己的位置而采取的可行策略。
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Still Searching: A Black Family’s Quest for Equality and Recognition during the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
Abstract Historians have correctly interpreted the Gilded Age and Progressive Era as periods in which African Americans faced unpreceded violence, a significant decline in franchise, and the loss of many civil rights. These years however, were far more complex when viewed from the vantage point of African American families who attempted to empower themselves through education, securing employment in white-collar occupations, such as teaching, and working to advance themselves through race betterment groups, including women’s clubs and civil rights organizations. Yet some middle-class Black families like the Stewarts not only rejected white society’s widely held belief of Blacks as racially inferior and incapable of progress. They also embraced migration as a constructive strategy to advance their individual careers and to elevate the race. In an era when the majority of Black workers had minimal literacy and worked unskilled menial jobs, T. McCants Stewart and his children each graduated from college or professional school, worked in white-collar or professional jobs, and paved the way for the next generation. Yet each also understood that migration outside of the Jim Crow South, including to Africa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the territory of Hawaii, held the key to their success. Thus, the Stewarts constructed a new vision of freedom and opportunity and believed that even despite the repressive conditions imposed upon Blacks during the Gilded Age and Progressive Era that there was room for growth and an opportunity to advance their careers. Migration, therefore, should be reconsidered as a viable strategy that some Black families adopted to find their place in American society.
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