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Interzones

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Interzones is an innovative account of how the color line was drawn--and how it was crossed--in twentieth-century American cities. Kevin Mumford chronicles the role of vice districts in New York an...
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  • 01 July 1997
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Interzones is an innovative account of how the color line was drawn--and how it was crossed--in twentieth-century American cities. Kevin Mumford chronicles the role of vice districts in New York and Chicago as crucibles for the shaping of racial categories and racial inequalities.

Focusing on Chicago's South Side and Levee districts, and Greenwich Village and Harlem in New York at the height of the Progressive era, Mumford traces the connections between the Great Migration, the commercialization of leisure, and the politics of reform and urban renewal. Interzones is the first book to examine in depth the combined effects on American culture of two major transformations: the migration north of southern blacks and the emergence of a new public consumer culture.

Mumford writes an important chapter in Progressive-era history from the perspectives of its most marginalized and dispossessed citizens. Recreating the mixed-race underworlds of brothels and dance halls, and charting the history of a black-white sexual subculture, Mumford shows how fluid race relations were in these "interzones." From Jack Johnson and the "white slavery" scare of the 1910's to the growth of a vital gay subculture and the phenomenon of white slumming, he explores in provocative detail the connections between political reforms and public culture, racial prejudice and sexual taboo, the hardening of the color line and the geography of modern inner cities.

The complicated links between race and sex, and reform and reaction, are vividly displayed in Mumford's look at a singular moment in the settling of American culture and society.

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Price: $130.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Popular Cultures, Everyday Lives
Publication Date: 01 July 1997
Trim Size: 6.20 X 9.30 in
ISBN: 9780231104920
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Cultural & Ethnic Studies / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Urban
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An interesting addition to the ever-growing list of works dealing with questions of race and ethnicity.
Kevin Mumford is an independent scholar who holds a Ph.D. in history from Stanford University. He was a post-doctoral fellow at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and has taught at the University of Minnesota.

Part I. Drawing the Color Line in the Progressive Era
1. Jack Johnson and the Abolition of White Slavery
2. Interzones 1: Transforming Urban Geography
3. Interzones 2: Reform and Representation
Part II. Crossing the Color Line in the 1920s
4. Leisure and Sexual Racism: In-Between Men in the Dance Halls
5. Interracial Intersections: Homosexuality and Black/White Relations
6. New Fallen Women: black/white prostitution
Part III. From Vice to Vogue
7. On Stage: the Social Response to All God's Chillun' Got Wings
8. Slumming: Appropriating the Margins for Pleasure
9. Racial Reactions: Prohibiting Miscegenation in the 1920s
Epilogue: Sexual Racisms
Notes
Bibliography
Index