
Black Milwaukee: The Making of an Industrial Proletariat, 1915-45
by Trotter, Joe William, Jr.-
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xi |
Acknowledgments | p. xv |
Preface to the Second Edition | p. xix |
Acknowledgments to the Second Edition | p. xxiii |
Prologue: The Antebellum and Civil War Roots of Milwaukee's Black Community | p. xxvii |
Introduction | |
Common Laborers and Domestic and Personal Service Workers in an Industrializing Economy, 1870-1914 | p. 3 |
Process and Significance of Proletarianization, 1915-32 | |
Migration, Industrial Jobs, and Housing, 1915-32 | p. 39 |
Emergence of the New Middle Class | p. 80 |
Race Relations, Politics, and Institutions | p. 115 |
Depression, World War II, and the Precarious Nature of Black Urban-Industrial Working Class Formation, 1933-45 | |
Depression, World War II, and the Struggle for Fair Employment in Defense Industries, 1933-45 | p. 147 |
Race, Class, and Politics during the Depression and World War II | p. 196 |
Proletarianization of Afro-Americans in Milwaukee, 1915-45: A Comparative Perspective | p. 226 |
Appendixes | |
Occupations of Milwaukee Blacks, 1880 | p. 245 |
Black Occupations in Milwaukee, 1900 | p. 245 |
Selected Black Occupations in Milwaukee, 1910 | p. 247 |
Black Occupations in Milwaukee, 1920 | p. 250 |
Black Occupations in Milwaukee, 1930 | p. 254 |
Black Occupations in Milwaukee, 1940 | p. 258 |
Afro-American Urban History: A Critique of the Literature | p. 264 |
Epilogue: Reflections on African American Life in Late Twentieth-Century Milwaukee | p. 283 |
State of the Field | p. 311 |
Race and Class in Urban History | p. 319 |
How Black Milwaukee Forever Changed the Study of African American Urban History | p. 322 |
Transcending Ghetto Boundaries | p. 327 |
Black Milwaukee, African American Migration Studies, and Recent U.S. Labor History | p. 338 |
Bibliographical Essay | p. 347 |
Contributors | p. 357 |
Index | p. 359 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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