Reconstructing African American Life in Nineteenth-Century New York City
My book reconstructs the social and cultural life of 19th-century black New Yorkers through the medium of family history. I focus on two figures--my paternal great-great-grandfather Peter Guignon (1813-85), and his son-in-law, my great-grandfather, Philip White (1824-91). Their careers as social activists, educators, and entrepreneurs exist to a surprising degree in the public record, and I recreate the larger social network within which they lived and worked. Family biography thus serves as a window onto a broader social panorama of black life that enhances our understanding not only of black New Yorkers but of African-American society in general. The project's methodologies and narrative style are designed to reach a broad audience.
[Grant products]
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Project fields:
African American Studies
Program:
Fellowships for University Teachers
Division:
Research Programs
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Totals:
$40,000 (approved) $40,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
9/1/2005 – 6/30/2006
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