
Discovering My Southern Legacy
Slave Culture and the American South
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Discovering My Southern Legacy
Slave Culture and the American South
About this book
What was the cultural legacy of enslaved Africans in the American South, and how has that legacy been handed through generations?
For author Deirdre Foreman, this question is a very personal one: in this book, she explores the cultural legacy of enslaved Africans in the American South through an ethno-autobiographical reflection on her own African-American identity and family heritage. Through storytelling and personal narratives, the author describes her family's cultural practices and how they are directly rooted in those of the enslaved Africans on the southern plantations. Known as "cultural survivors," enslaved Africans established cultural customs and norms out of resistance to the control of white slaveholders to maintain their independence and pride.
Ideal reading for students of Black studies, African American studies, Africana studies, and related courses, this autoethnography humanizes and personalizes concepts that are crucial to the understanding of Black culture and Black history.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on language and content
- Introduction
- 1 Ghana
- 2 The “Big House”
- 3 Tobacco field
- 4 Farming and gardening
- 5 Bare feet
- 6 Cornrows
- 7 Linguistic Africanisms
- Conclusion
- Recommended discussion topics
- Appendices
- References
- Recommended further reading
- Index