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Harlan Renaissance: Stories of Black Life in Appalachian Coal Towns
Harlan Renaissance: Stories of Black Life in Appalachian Coal Towns | William H Turner
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The Harlan Renaissance is an intimate remembrance of kinship and community in eastern Kentucky's coal towns written by one of theluminaries of Appalachian studies, William Turner. Turner reconstructs Black life in the company towns in and around Harlan County during coal's final postwar boom years, which built toward an enduring bust as the children of Black miners, like the author, left the region in search of better opportunities.The Harlan Renaissance invites readers into what might be an unfamiliar Appalachia: one studded by large and vibrant Black com-munities, where families took the pulse of the nation through magazines like Jet and Ebony and through the news that traveled within Black churches, schools, and restaurants. Difficult choices for the future were made as parents considered the unpredictable nature ofAppalachia's economic realities alongside the unpredictable natureof a national movement toward civil rights.Unfolding through layers of sociological insight and oral history, The Harlan Renaissance centers the sympathetic perspectives and critical eye of a master narrator of Black life.
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An insightful memoir that focuses attention on an often-ignored group, the black Americans in Appalachian coal towns. Turner was a child in an eastern Kentucky coal town and he reminisces about the way things were, finding good (e.g., the sense of community) and bad (being so reliant on the company for your life, the changes that integration brought). An interesting, thought-provoking book.

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