🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

The Marrow of Tradition

Product image 1

The Marrow of Tradition

In this landmark tale, one of the great American novelists exposed the harsh dimensions of Southern prejudice during post–Reconstruction era. Charles W. Chesnutt traces the intertwined lives of two prominent families: one headed by a newspaper editor and flagrant white supremacist; the other by the founder of a hospital for African Americans, whose biracial wife is the unacknowledged half-sister of the editor's wife. Their personal dramas unfold amid an atmosphere of public hysteria that erupts in a massacre — one based on an actual incident.
The 1898 race riot of Wilmington, North Carolina, left a considerable number of African Americans dead and expelled thousands more from their homes. Chesnutt drew upon survivors' accounts, including those of members of his own family, for an authentic retelling of the facts. His powerful and passionate exploration of how miscegenation, social rank, and the concept of white supremacy gave rise to Jim Crow laws provides an insightful analysis of racial conflict at the turn of the twentieth century.

Reprint of the original, 1901 edition.
black history month; black af history; black authors; black history books for kids adults; african american; history; american south; americana; civil war; emancipation; fugitive slave; historical; murder; north carolina; political; prejudice; racial; stereotypes; tension; racism; riots; slavery; suspense; union and confederacy
$8.00
The Marrow of Tradition—
$8.00

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

In this landmark tale, one of the great American novelists exposed the harsh dimensions of Southern prejudice during post–Reconstruction era. Charles W. Chesnutt traces the intertwined lives of two prominent families: one headed by a newspaper editor and flagrant white supremacist; the other by the founder of a hospital for African Americans, whose biracial wife is the unacknowledged half-sister of the editor's wife. Their personal dramas unfold amid an atmosphere of public hysteria that erupts in a massacre — one based on an actual incident.
The 1898 race riot of Wilmington, North Carolina, left a considerable number of African Americans dead and expelled thousands more from their homes. Chesnutt drew upon survivors' accounts, including those of members of his own family, for an authentic retelling of the facts. His powerful and passionate exploration of how miscegenation, social rank, and the concept of white supremacy gave rise to Jim Crow laws provides an insightful analysis of racial conflict at the turn of the twentieth century.

Reprint of the original, 1901 edition.
black history month; black af history; black authors; black history books for kids adults; african american; history; american south; americana; civil war; emancipation; fugitive slave; historical; murder; north carolina; political; prejudice; racial; stereotypes; tension; racism; riots; slavery; suspense; union and confederacy