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To Live Peaceably Together: The American Friends Service Committee's Campaign for Open Housing [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, 12 halftones
  • Serija: Historical Studies of Urban America
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Apr-2022
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 0226817814
  • ISBN-13: 9780226817811
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, 12 halftones
  • Serija: Historical Studies of Urban America
  • Išleidimo metai: 14-Apr-2022
  • Leidėjas: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN-10: 0226817814
  • ISBN-13: 9780226817811
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
A groundbreaking look at how a predominantly white faith-based group reset the terms of the fight to integrate US cities.

The bitterly tangled webs of race and housing in the postwar United States hardly suffer from a lack of scholarly attention. But Tracy K’Meyer’s To Live Peaceably Together delivers something truly new to the field: a lively examination of a predominantly white faith-based group—the Quaker-aligned American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)—that took a unique and ultimately influential approach to cultivating wider acceptance of residential integration. Built upon detailed stories of AFSC activists and the obstacles they encountered in their work in Chicago, Philadelphia, and Richmond, California, To Live Peaceably Together is an engaging and timely account of how the organization allied itself to a cause that demanded constant learning, reassessment, and self-critique. K’Meyer details the spiritual and humanist motivations behind the AFSC, its members’ shifting strategies as they came to better understand structural inequality, and how those strategies were eventually adopted by a variety of other groups. Her fine-grained investigation of the cultural ramifications of housing struggles provides a fresh look at the last seventy years of racial activism.
 

Recenzijos

"To Live Peaceably Together is an original and highly readable book that reorients our understanding of the Black Freedom Struggle in the North by focusing on an advocacy group run mainly by white allies, a historical topic with great contemporary relevance. I salute K'Meyer's achievement in telling this fascinating and overlooked story." * Todd Michney, Georgia Institute of Technology *

Introduction
Chapter 1 Getting Started: Launching the Housing Opportunities Programs
Chapter 2 Organizing the Suburbs: White Fair Housers and Black Pioneers
Chapter 3 Direct Action: Battering the Gates, Nonviolently
Chapter 4 Speaking Truth to Power: Using the Power of Government to
Integrate Housing
Chapter 5 Community Organizing: "A People Program in a Housing Context"
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Archive Collection Abbreviations
Notes
Index
Tracy E. K'Meyer is professor of history at the University of Louisville