Front cover image for Growing up Jim Crow : how Black and White southern children learned race

Growing up Jim Crow : how Black and White southern children learned race

In the segregated South of the early twentieth century, unwritten rules guided every aspect of individual behavior, from how blacks and whites stood, sat, ate, drank, walked, and talked to whether they made eye contact with one another. Jennifer Ritterhouse asks how children learned this racial "etiquette," which was sustained by coercion and the threat of violence. More broadly, she asks how individuals developed racial self-consciousness. Parental instruction was an important factor--both white parents' reinforcement of a white supremacist worldview and black parents' oppositional lessons in respectability and race pride. Children also learned much from their interactions across race lines. The fact that black youths were often eager to stand up for themselves, despite the risks, suggests that the emotional underpinnings of the civil rights movement were in place long before the historical moment when change became possible. Meanwhile, a younger generation of whites continued to enforce traditional patterns of domination and deference in private, while also creating an increasingly elaborate system of segregation in public settings. Exploring relationships between public and private and between segregation, racial etiquette, and racial violence, Growing Up Jim Crow sheds new light on tradition and change in the South and the meanings of segregation within southern culture
Print Book, English, ©2006
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, ©2006
History
xii, 306 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780807830161, 9780807856840, 080783016X, 0807856843
62535962
Introduction : forgotten alternatives
The etiquette of race relations
Carefully taught
I knew then who I was
Playing and fighting
Adolescence
Conclusion : children of the sun