
Contents
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Sweeping Out “No Jim Crow” Zones Sweeping Out “No Jim Crow” Zones
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Jim Crow Enters Public Housing Jim Crow Enters Public Housing
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Modernist Urban Transformations Modernist Urban Transformations
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Conclusion: Stepping Back from the Archives Conclusion: Stepping Back from the Archives
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Four Defying Racist Stereotypes: The Big Nine and Lincoln Park as Sites of Diasporic Cosmopolitanism
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Three Cosmopolitanism as Concealment: The Dynamo of Dixie during Jim Crow, 1890–1968
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Published:May 2018
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Abstract
Chapter 3 continues this analysis through the ‘Jim Crow’ and Civil Rights eras. The chapter reveals critical double standards with respect to city planning and cultural development in Chattanooga; contradictions and inequalities that persist today. It also argues the historical conceptualization of black culture and community development as antithetical to urban progress was promulgated during and after the Reconstruction Period so that whites had a rationale to justify their ongoing subjugation and exploitation of Black labor across all areas of the Dynamo of Dixie’s rapidly expanding local economy. The long history of de facto and de jure Jim Crow laws and structural inequalities explored in this chapter are testament to these legacies of oppression.
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