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Contentious Cosmopolitans: Black Public History and Civil Rights in Cold War Chicago, 1942-1972.

机译:有争议的世界主义者:1942-1972年的芝加哥冷战时期的黑人公共历史和公民权利。

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摘要

This dissertation looks at how teachers, unionists, and cultural workers used black history to offer new ways of thinking about racial knowledge from a local level. Numerous efforts to promote and teach this history demonstrated how dissident cosmopolitan political currents from previous decades remained relevant to a vibrant and ideologically diffuse African American public sphere despite widespread Cold War dispersions, white supremacist reactions, and anticommunist repressions.;My argument proceeds by demonstrating how these public history projects coalesced around a series of connected pedagogical endeavors. These endeavors included the work of school teachers on Chicago's South side who tried to advance curriculum reforms through World War II and afterwards, the work of packinghouse workers and other union-focused educators who used anti-discrimination campaigns to teach about the history of African Americans and Mexican Americans in the labor movement and to advance innovative models for worker education, and the activities of important cultural workers like Margaret and Charles Burroughs who politicized urban space and fought for greater recognition of black history in the public sphere through the advancement of their vision for a museum.;Collectively, these projects expressed important ideas about race, citizenship, education and intellectual labors that engaged closely with the rapidly shifting terrains of mid-20th Century civil rights and international anti-colonialisms. Ultimately, this dissertation offers a social history about how cosmopolitan cultural work in public history and similar forms of knowledge production were at the intersections of political realities and lived experience in U.S. urban life.
机译:本文着眼于教师,工会和文化工作者如何利用黑人历史来提供从地方层面思考种族知识的新方法。尽管过去冷战广泛散布,白人至上主义的反应和反共主义的镇压,但为促进和传授这一历史而进行的大量努力表明,过去几十年的持不同政见的国际政治潮流如何仍然与充满活力和意识形态上分散的非裔美国公共领域相关。这些公共历史项目围绕着一系列相互联系的教学活动而融合在一起。这些努力包括芝加哥南侧的学校教师的工作,他们试图通过第二次世界大战以及随后的发展来推进课程改革;包装厂工人和其他以工会为中心的教育工作者的工作,他们利用反歧视运动来讲述非裔美国人的历史和墨西哥裔美国人参加劳工运动,并推广创新的工人教育模式,以及玛格丽特和查尔斯·伯劳斯等重要文化工作者的活动,他们将城市空间政治化,并通过提高视野来争取公共领域的黑人历史总的来说,这些项目表达了关于种族,公民身份,教育和知识劳动的重要思想,这些思想与20世纪中叶民权和国际反殖民主义迅速变化的地区紧密相关。最终,本文提供了一个社会历史,涉及公共历史中的大都市文化工作和类似形式的知识生产如何处于政治现实与美国城市生活经验的交汇处。

著录项

  • 作者单位

    University of Toronto (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 University of Toronto (Canada).;
  • 学科 Black history.;American history.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2014
  • 页码 363 p.
  • 总页数 363
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:53:44

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