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- catalog abstract "The Negro Family in the United States, was hailed as a highly important contribution to the intimate history of the people of the United States. It was the first comprehensive study of the family life of African Americans, beginning with colonial-era slavery, extending through the years of slavery and emancipation, to the impact of Jim Crow and migrations to both southern and northern cities in the twentieth century. Frazier discussed all the themes that have concerned subsequent students of the African American family, including matriarchy and patriarchy, the impact of slavery on family solidarity and personal identity, the impact of long-term poverty and lack of access to education, migration and rootlessness, and the relationship between family and community. Frazier insisted that the characteristics of the family were shaped not by race, but by social conditions.".
- catalog contributor b2002593.
- catalog created "1966.".
- catalog date "1966".
- catalog date "1966.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1966.".
- catalog description "Bibliographical footnotes.".
- catalog description "Part one: In the house of the master. 1. Forgotten memories -- 2. Human, all too human -- 3. Motherhood in bondage -- 4. Hagar and her children --- Part two: In the house of the mother. 5. Broken bonds -- 6. Unfettered motherhood -- 7. The matriarchate -- 8. Granny: the guardian of generations --- Part three: The house of the father. 9. The downfall of the matriarchate -- 10. The sons of the free -- 11. Racial islands -- 12. Black puritans --- Part four: In the city of destruction. 13. Roving men and homeless women -- 14. The right from Feudal America -- 15. Fathers on leave -- 16. Outlawed motherhood -- 17. Rebelious youth -- 18. Divorce: scrip from the law --- Part five: In the city of rebirth. 19. Old families and new classes -- 20. The brown middle class -- 21. The Black proletariat --- Conclusion: 22. Retropspect and prospect.".
- catalog description "The Negro Family in the United States, was hailed as a highly important contribution to the intimate history of the people of the United States. It was the first comprehensive study of the family life of African Americans, beginning with colonial-era slavery, extending through the years of slavery and emancipation, to the impact of Jim Crow and migrations to both southern and northern cities in the twentieth century. Frazier discussed all the themes that have concerned subsequent students of the African American family, including matriarchy and patriarchy, the impact of slavery on family solidarity and personal identity, the impact of long-term poverty and lack of access to education, migration and rootlessness, and the relationship between family and community. Frazier insisted that the characteristics of the family were shaped not by race, but by social conditions.".
- catalog extent "xxii, 372 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Negro family in the United States.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Negro family in the United States.".
- catalog issued "1966".
- catalog issued "1966.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Chicago : University of Chicago Press,".
- catalog relation "Negro family in the United States.".
- catalog subject "301.45196073".
- catalog subject "African American families.".
- catalog subject "African Americans Social conditions To 1964.".
- catalog subject "African Continental Ancestry Group.".
- catalog subject "E185.86 .F74 1966".
- catalog subject "Family.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part one: In the house of the master. 1. Forgotten memories -- 2. Human, all too human -- 3. Motherhood in bondage -- 4. Hagar and her children --- Part two: In the house of the mother. 5. Broken bonds -- 6. Unfettered motherhood -- 7. The matriarchate -- 8. Granny: the guardian of generations --- Part three: The house of the father. 9. The downfall of the matriarchate -- 10. The sons of the free -- 11. Racial islands -- 12. Black puritans --- Part four: In the city of destruction. 13. Roving men and homeless women -- 14. The right from Feudal America -- 15. Fathers on leave -- 16. Outlawed motherhood -- 17. Rebelious youth -- 18. Divorce: scrip from the law --- Part five: In the city of rebirth. 19. Old families and new classes -- 20. The brown middle class -- 21. The Black proletariat --- Conclusion: 22. Retropspect and prospect.".
- catalog title "The Negro family in the United States.".
- catalog type "text".