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Review Essay

Volume 22 • Number 2

Winter 2003



 

 

THE JIM CROW SOUTH

Remembering Jim Crow: African Americans Tell About Life in the Segregated South. Edited by William H. Chafe, Raymond Gavins, and Robert Korstad, with Paul Ortiz, Robert Parrish, Jennifer Ritterhouse, Keisha Roberts, and Nicole Waligora-Davis. New York: The New Press, In Association with Lyndhurst Brooks of the Center for Documentary Studies of Duke University. 2001. xxxv + 346 pp. Illustrations, appendices, and index. Two one- hour audio CDs. $55.00.

Susan Bragg
University of Washington


In 1995, African American veteran Tolbert Chism explained his interest in black history to an interviewer, saying, "You see, our education as black people had been limited to only what the whites wanted us to know about ourselves, but nothing from our background as to what our origin was and where we had come from. I found that out" (p. 76). Chism's story of his self-education is one of many powerful histories included in Remembering Jim Crow: African Americans Tell About Life in the Segregated South. This primary source collection emerged from Duke University's Behind the Veil project to document African American experiences in the South, a project which produced over 1,300 interviews with elderly African Americans from diverse regions and communities. The result is a dense and compelling series of oral histories that reveal both the necessary accommodations to the systems of racial oppression known collectively as Jim Crow and the daily protests against such discrimination. Accompanied by two compact discs that contain audio selections from many of the interviews, this collection is an excellent teaching tool, giving students a glimpse into the variety of ways that Jim Crow segregation shaped the lives of African Americans and, of course, Southerners in general.


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