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Interzones : Black / White Sex Districts in Chicago and New York in the Early Twentieth Century
Interzones : Black / White Sex Districts in Chicago and New York in the Early Twentieth Century
Author: Mumford, Kevin J.
Edition/Copyright: 1997
ISBN: 0-231-10493-6
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Type: Print On Demand
Used Print:  $24.00
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Author Bio
Review
Summary
 
  Author Bio

Mumford, Kevin : Stanford University

Mumford is an independent scholar who holds a Ph.D. in history from Stanford University.

 
  Review

"A first-of-its-kind scholarly exploration of race and racism, and the explosive power of black/white cross-racial sexuality. Focusing on marginal groups in Chicago and New York in the early years of the twentieth century, Interzones engages the idea that black/white sexuality frequently extends beyond the interpersonal into the realm of the political. In clear and sometimes compelling prose that probes deeply into the complexities of its subject, this book is a must-read for everyone interested in the dynamics of race and sex in America."

--Nellie McKay, author of Jean Toomer, Artist: A Study of His Literary Life and Work


"Mumford argues that the United States is unique in its historical anxiety about and regulation of black / white sex. Fears of �miscegenation´ played hidden but determinant roles in shaping racial and gender identities at the beginning of the twentieth century. . . .This racialization of sex . . . generated a new urban landscape. �Interzones´ were the black / white sex districts . . . located in neighborhoods with inhabitants who were black and white, heterosexual and homosexual, prostitute and customer. . . Interzones represents a significant and critical foray into the perplexities of the urban interracial universe."

--culturefront


"The book is a good addition to an emerging body of creative and innovative work on the cultural history of race and the complicated relationship between marginal and mainstream culture in early twentieth-century America."

--Amy Gilman Srebnick, American Historical Review



Columbia University Press Web Site, March, 2000

 
  Summary

From black female prostitution to homosexual brothels, from taxi dance halls to speakeasies, Kevin Mumford reconstructs the mixed-race underworld of the Great Migration and the Progressive era to reveal how these subcultures transformed not only race relations, but American culture as well.

 

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