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I | Trespassing the color line : aggressive mobility, sexual transgression, and racial consolidation in new negro movements | 15 |
1 | Un/sexing the race : modernizing and marketing the new world negro | 21 |
Migratory mobility and the sexually assertive race tract : Chesnutt and Pickens | 26 | |
Staging the race : verbal display in Du Bois and Washington | 41 | |
The arrested gaze : the race album and the fraternal look of the new world negro | 61 | |
The inner genius of new negrodom : the aesthetics of modernity in Locke's New negro | 77 | |
2 | The cool pose of racial trespassing : new negro personal narrative as Jim Crow realism | 90 |
Defending manhood as new negro weapon : Pickens's Bursting bonds | 94 | |
Sissy heroics : Walter White's Fire in the flint | 105 | |
The black body as uplift instruemnt : the personal narratives of Ida B. Wells and Taylor Gordon | 120 | |
3 | New negro social science : sexual deviance, black male professionalization, and the sociology of containment | 145 |
The migratory nether world : the "submerged tenth" in Du Bois's sociology of surveillance | 149 | |
The black male sociologist as chivalrous Christian mediator : George Edmund Haynes | 162 | |
The social accommodations of Chicago sociology in Charles S. Johnson and E. Franklin Frazier | 166 | |
Between the lines of Drake and Cayton's Black metropolis | 186 | |
II | Negotiating racial uplift : gender rivalry and erotic longing in the making of new negro patronage | 193 |
4 | Civilizing acts : the sexual appeals of patronage in new negro political organizing | 200 |
The machinery of patronage | 204 | |
Mothering the race : the white woman as race patron | 225 | |
Tutoring "the lady of the races" : the ambivalent attraction of the white male patron | 238 | |
5 | Midwifing the renaissance : prostitution, same-sexuality, and the procreative logic of patronage | 252 |
Tropes of affiliation : theorizing the sexual subtexts of renaissance patronage | 253 | |
The false(tto) accent of white bothemianism : McKay's patronage attack | 267 | |
Godmothering and the psychic traps of race patronage | 281 | |
"Pussy-footing" Dr. Locke : masculine networking as (homo)racial contest | 284 | |
III | "A city jungle this" : footloose desire and the sexual underworlds of Harlem renaissance fiction | 301 |
6 | Waging urban warfare : violence, fraternity, and eroticism in black men's urban folk narrative | 309 |
Rudolph Fisher's moderated manhood | 315 | |
Reforming martial and marital values of manhood in McKay's Home to Harlem | 330 | |
Pals and lovers : companions and men-loving men in the urban folk novel | 337 | |
7 | Unromantically inclined : female protagonists and the resistance to dominant masculinity | 355 |
Mobile heroines : the female-centered precursors of urban folk fiction | 357 | |
The quicksand of black feminine desire | 363 | |
Same-sexuality, sadomasochism, and feminine rebellion in Thurman's Blacker the berry | 379 |
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Add Manning the Race: Reforming Black Men in the Jim Crow Era, Manning the Race explores how African American men have been marketed, embodied, and imaged for the purposes of racial advancement during the early decades of the twentieth century. Marlon Ross provides an intellectual history of both famous and le, Manning the Race: Reforming Black Men in the Jim Crow Era to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Manning the Race: Reforming Black Men in the Jim Crow Era, Manning the Race explores how African American men have been marketed, embodied, and imaged for the purposes of racial advancement during the early decades of the twentieth century. Marlon Ross provides an intellectual history of both famous and le, Manning the Race: Reforming Black Men in the Jim Crow Era to your collection on WonderClub |