Milton Vickerman [email protected] University of Virginia Department of Sociology P.O

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Milton Vickerman Mv8d@Virginia.Edu University of Virginia Department of Sociology P.O Milton Vickerman [email protected] University of Virginia Department of Sociology P.O. Box 400766 Randall Hall, Room 208 Charlottesville, VA 22904 Areas of Interest Race Theory, The History of Race, Racial Inequality, Immigration, Assimilation, The Caribbean, White Nationalism, Social Inequality, The American Dream, Religion Education New York University, Ph.D., Sociology (1992); M.Phil., Sociology M.A., Sociology (1986); Long Island University, B.A., Sociology, summa cum laude (1983). Current Positions Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Virginia, 2000-Present Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Virginia, 1994-2000 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Bloomfield College, 1991-1994 Faculty Affiliations Graduate Faculty, Virginia Commonwealth University; American Studies; Initiative in Religion, Politics, and Conflict; Woodson Center Publications (selected) Books Vickerman, Milton and Hephzibah Strmic-Pawl. 2021. Race and Ethnicity: Constancy in Change. San Diego: Cognella (2nd edition). Vickerman, Milton. 2013. The Problem of Post-Racialism. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave-MacMillan. Vickerman, Milton. 1999. Crosscurrents: West Indian Immigrants and Race. New York: Oxford University Press. Articles Vickerman, Milton. 2018. “Staking Post-Racialism in Charlottesville.” Contexts 17 (1): 24-26. Vickerman, Milton. 2016. “Black Immigrants, Perceptions of Difference, and Blackness” Journal of American Ethnic History 36 (1): 71-81. Vickerman, Milton. 2010. “American Diversity: Past, Present, and Future.” International Journal of Contemporary Sociology 47 (2): 13-41 Vickerman, Milton. 2007. “Recent Immigration and Race: Continuity and Change.” Du Bios Review 4(1): 1-25. Vickerman, Milton. 2007. “Post-1965 Immigration and Assimilation: A Reply to Randy Capps.” The Virginia Journal of Law and Social Policy 14 (2): 106-122 Vickerman, Milton. 1999. “Representing West Indians in Film: Ciphers, Coons, and Criminals.” The Western Journal of Black Studies 23 (2): 8-21. 1 Vickerman, Milton. 1996.“West Indian Immigrant Adaptation: The Role of Cross-Pressures.” The Trotter Review 10 (1) Vickerman, Milton. 1994. "The Responses of West Indians to African-Americans: Distancing and Identification.” Research in Race and Ethnic Relations 7: 83-128. Chapters Vickerman, Milton. “Post-1965 Immigrants, African Americans and the Limits of the American Dream.” The Routledge Handbook on the American Dream, edited by Robert Hauhart and Mitja Sardoc. Forthcoming. Vickerman, Milton. 2015. “Non-Hispanic West Indians: Race, Identity, and Incorporation.” In Contemporary Ethnic Geographies, 2nd Edition, edited by Christopher Airriess. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield. Vickerman, Milton. 2013. “Jamaicans: Balancing Race and Ethnicity.” Pp.176-199 in One out of Three, edited by Nancy Foner. New York: Columbia University Press. Vickerman, Milton. 2007. “Jamaicans.” Pp.479-490 in New Americans, edited by Mary C. Waters and Reed Ueda. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Vickerman, Milton. 2006. “Non-Hispanic West Indians.” Pp.151-174 in Contemporary Ethnic Geographies, edited by Christopher Airriess and Ines Mirayes. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield. Vickerman, Milton. 2002. “Second Generation West Indian Transnationalism.” Pp.341-366 in The Changing Face of Home, edited by Peggy Levitt and Mary C. Waters. Russell Sage Foundation. Vickerman, Milton. 2001. “Tweaking A Monolith: The West Indian Immigrant Encounter with ‘Blackness’.” Pp. 237-256 in Islands in the City: West Indian Migration to New York, edited by Nancy Foner. University of California Press. Vickerman, Milton. 2001. “Jamaicans: Balancing Race and Ethnicity.” Pp.201-228 in New Immigrants in New York, edited by Nancy Foner. Columbia University Press. Kasinitz, Philip and Milton Vickerman. 2001. “Ethnic Niches and Racial Traps: Jamaicans in the New York City Regional Economy.” Pp.121-211 in Migration, Transnationalization and Race in A Changing New York, edited by Hector R. Cordero-Guzman, Robert C. Smith, and Ramon Grosfoguel. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. Kasinitz, Philip and Milton Vickerman. 1999. “West Indians/Caribbeans.” Pp.520-541 in A Nation of Peoples, edited by Eliott Barkan. Greenwood Press. Reports Guterbock, Tom, Karen Walker, Milton Vickerman, Abdoulaye Diop, Bruce Taylor, Christopher Koper, Timothy Carter, and Nicole Fedoravicius. 2010. Evaluation Study of Prince William County’s Immigration Enforcement Policy. Book Reviews American Journal of Sociology (2011; 2019); Black Issues Book Review (2000); Canadian Online Journal of Sociology (2002); Choice (2007-2013 (12)); Contemporary Sociology (2000;2002;2004); Ethnic and Racial Studies (2010; 2012; 2016); Human Rights Review (2010); International Migration Review (1998); Journal of American Ethnic History (1992; 2002; 2003; 2012); Journal of Haitian Studies (2004); Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion (1995 (3)); Sociological Forum (2008; 2010; 2013; 2020 (2)); Teaching Sociology (1994); Urban Studies (2010). 2 Other Reviews (Book Jacket Blurbs) Ali, Syed and Douglas Hartmann. 2015. Migration, Incorporation, and Change in an Interconnected World. New York: Routledge. Coleman-King, Chonika. 2014. The (Re-)Making of a Black American. New York: Peter Lang. Poros, Maritsa. 2010. Modern Migrations. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Shaw-Taylor, Yoku and Steven A. Tuch. 2007. The Other African Americans. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. Mahoney, Annette M. 2005. The Health and Well-Being of Caribbean Immigrants in the United States. New York: Hayworth Press. Stone, John and Rutledge Dennis. 2002. Race and Ethnicity. Malden: Blackwell Publishers. Works in Progress “Lebensraum’s Tropical Turn: White Nationalists’ (Almost) Caribbean Home.”– an article length analysis of the white nationalist plot to overthrow the government of Dominica. Post-1965 Immigrants, African Americans and the Limits of the American Dream – a book proposal analyzing the shortcomings of the American dream concept, viewed through the lens of traditionally disadvantaged groups. Immigrant assimilation in new destinations – ongoing research on black immigrants settling in the South. Research Grants, Fellowships, and Awards (Selected) Initiative on Religion, Politics, and Conflict for study of African refugees (2018): $19,500. Office of the Provost: Proposal selected for Provost’s “Teaching Race at UVA” initiative (2018). University of Virginia: Sesquicentennial Fellowship (research leave), (Fall 2016). University of Virginia: AHSS/VPR Research Grant (2016). University of Virginia: Sesquicentennial Fellowship (research leave), (Fall 2006). University of Virginia: Harrison Fellowship (with Kathryn Morrow) (Fall 2004-Spring 2005). National Science Foundation: National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant for Kenneth Oman: “Framing the Picture: Racial Profiling and Public Discourse.” (2002). University of Virginia: Sesquicentennial Fellowship (research leave), (Spring 1999). Social Science Research Council: Research Fellowship (with Jan Rosenberg) (1990-1991). Invited Presentations and Conferences February 20, 2020 Eastern Tennessee State University Invited to participate in a panel debating Black language in the United States. August 2019 American Sociological Association Annual Conference, New York City Presented paper: “Cycles of Hate and Charlottesville.” American Sociological Association Annual Conference, New York City Roundtable Presider: Roundtable title: “Anti-Immigrant Discourses.” 3 April 5, 2018 Southern Sociological Society Annual Conference, New Orleans Presented paper on 2017 white nationalist riot in Charlottesville. December 12, 2017 Albemarle County Department of Social Services, Charlottesville: Invited to present talk on the causes of social inequality and poverty. August 2017 American Sociological Association Annual Conference, Montreal Presented paper on African migration in the southern United States. March 25, 2017 Virginia Social Science Association Annual Conference, Richmond, VA Presented paper on ongoing research on black immigrants; paper title: “An Unexpected Entry Point: Central Virginia as an Emergent Immigrant Gateway.” October 16, 2015 Virginia Commonwealth University: Fourth Conference on Ethnicity, Race and Indigenous Peoples (ERIP) in Latin America and the Caribbean Presented paper: “Ethnic Identity, Racial Identity, or Ethno-racial Identity: Identity Options among West Indian Immigrants.” March 26, 2015 Southern Sociological Society Annual Conference, New Orleans Author meets Critic: Invited to participate on panel critiquing Eli Anderson’s The Cosmopolitan Canopy. February 27, 2015 Eastern Sociological Society Annual Conference, New York City Presented paper: “Constructing Latino Immigrants as A Problem and A Political Opportunity.” August 11, 2013 American Sociological Association Annual Conference, New York City Presented paper based on chapter on West Indians in New York City in Nancy Foner’s One in Three. November 2, 2012 CIS/ASA Sociology of Development Conference, UVA Invited to present paper on Latino migration to the U.S. November 4, 2011 Association for Public Analysis and Management Annual Fall Conference, Washington, D.C. (with Tom Guterbock). Invited to present paper on evaluation of Prince William County immigration policy; paper title: “The Impact of Prince William County’s Illegal Immigration Enforcement Policy on Population Change.” May 2, 2008 Prince William County Police Department, Prince William County Invited to present an overview
Recommended publications
  • Poisonous Plants of the Southern United States
    Poisonous Plants of the Southern United States Poisonous Plants of the Southern United States Common Name Genus and Species Page atamasco lily Zephyranthes atamasco 21 bitter sneezeweed Helenium amarum 20 black cherry Prunus serotina 6 black locust Robinia pseudoacacia 14 black nightshade Solanum nigrum 16 bladderpod Glottidium vesicarium 11 bracken fern Pteridium aquilinum 5 buttercup Ranunculus abortivus 9 castor bean Ricinus communis 17 cherry laurel Prunus caroliniana 6 chinaberry Melia azederach 14 choke cherry Prunus virginiana 6 coffee senna Cassia occidentalis 12 common buttonbush Cephalanthus occidentalis 25 common cocklebur Xanthium pensylvanicum 15 common sneezeweed Helenium autumnale 19 common yarrow Achillea millefolium 23 eastern baccharis Baccharis halimifolia 18 fetterbush Leucothoe axillaris 24 fetterbush Leucothoe racemosa 24 fetterbush Leucothoe recurva 24 great laurel Rhododendron maxima 9 hairy vetch Vicia villosa 27 hemp dogbane Apocynum cannabinum 23 horsenettle Solanum carolinense 15 jimsonweed Datura stramonium 8 johnsongrass Sorghum halepense 7 lantana Lantana camara 10 maleberry Lyonia ligustrina 24 Mexican pricklepoppy Argemone mexicana 27 milkweed Asclepias tuberosa 22 mountain laurel Kalmia latifolia 6 mustard Brassica sp . 25 oleander Nerium oleander 10 perilla mint Perilla frutescens 28 poison hemlock Conium maculatum 17 poison ivy Rhus radicans 20 poison oak Rhus toxicodendron 20 poison sumac Rhus vernix 21 pokeberry Phytolacca americana 8 rattlebox Daubentonia punicea 11 red buckeye Aesculus pavia 16 redroot pigweed Amaranthus retroflexus 18 rosebay Rhododendron calawbiense 9 sesbania Sesbania exaltata 12 scotch broom Cytisus scoparius 13 sheep laurel Kalmia angustifolia 6 showy crotalaria Crotalaria spectabilis 5 sicklepod Cassia obtusifolia 12 spotted water hemlock Cicuta maculata 17 St. John's wort Hypericum perforatum 26 stagger grass Amianthum muscaetoxicum 22 sweet clover Melilotus sp .
    [Show full text]
  • The History of Fire in the Southern United States
    Special Section on Fire Human Ecology The History of Fire in the Southern United States Cynthia Fowler Wofford College Spartanburg, SC1 Evelyn Konopik USDA Forest Service Asheville, NC2 Abstract ern Appalachians, and Ozark-Ouachita Highlands. Using this holistic framework, we consider “both ends of the fire stick” Anthropogenic fires have been a key form of disturbance (Vayda 2005) examining elements of fire use by each cultur- in southern ecosystems for more than 10,000 years. Archae- al group that has inhabited the South and its effects on south- ological and ethnohistorical information reveal general pat- ern ecosystems. terns in fire use during the five major cultural periods in the South; these are Native American prehistory, early European Table 1. Major Periods of Human-Caused Fire Regimes in the settlement, industrialization, fire suppression, and fire man- South agement. Major shifts in cultural traditions are linked to sig- FIRE Native Early Industrial- Fire Fire nificant transitions in fire regimes. A holistic approach to fire REGIME American European ization Suppression Management ecology is necessary for illuminating the multiple, complex Prehistory Settlers links between the cultural history of the South and the evolu- DATES 12,500 BP 1500s AD 1800s to 1920s to 1940s/80s tion of southern ecosystems. The web of connections between to 1500s to1700s 1900s 1940s/1980s to Present history, society, politics, economy, and ecology are inherent AD AD to the phenomena of fire. TYPICAL Low Low Stand Federal Prescribed BURNS intensity intensity replacing lands fires of brush fires brush fires fires set protected mixed Keywords: fire, culture, Native Americans, US South mainly for by loggers from fire intensity and agricultural and farmers frequency A Holistic View of People and Fire purposes Written documents that address fire ecology in the South include more than 380 years of publications, ranging from The Native American Contribution to Prehistoric Fire Smith’s 1625 monograph to Kennard’s 2005 essay.
    [Show full text]
  • Climate of the Southeast United States
    N$%"',$! C!"#$%& A++&++#&,% R&."',$! T&/),"/$! I,0*% R&0'1% S&1"&+ C!"#$%& '( %)& S'*%)&$+% U,"%&- S%$%&+ VARIABILITY, CHANGE, IMPACTS, AND VULNERABILITY Edited by: Keith T. Ingram Kirstin Dow Lynne Carter Julie Anderson Climate of the Southeast United States Variability, Change, Impacts, and Vulnerability © 2013 Southeast Climate Consortium All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Reproduction of this report by electronic means for personal and noncommercial purposes ȱĴȱȱȱȱȱ ȱȱǯȱȱȱȱȱ ¢ȱȱȱȱȱ ȱȱȱȱ ȱȱȱ ȱ ȱȱȱ Ĵȱȱȱȱǯ ȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱǯ Printed on recycled, acid-free paper ȱȱȱȱȱȱ Citation: ǰȱ ǯǰȱ ǯȱ ǰȱǯȱǰȱ ǯȱǰȱǯȱŘŖŗřǯȱȱȱȱȱ ȱDZȱ¢ǰȱǰȱǰȱȱ¢ǯȱȱDZȱ ȱǯ Keywords:ȱȬĴȬȱǰȱǰȱǰȱȱ¢ǰȱ ǰȱǰȱȱǰȱ¢ǰȱȱ ǰȱȱǰȱ climate impacts, climate modeling, climate variability, coastal, drought, education, electric ȱǰȱ¡ȱ ǰȱĚǰȱȱǰȱ£ǰȱȱȱǰȱ ȱ ǰȱǰȱȬȱǰȱǰȱǰȱǰȱȱȱ ǰȱȱęǰȱȱǰȱǰȱȱǰȱǰȱȬ ȱ intrusion, sea level rise, silviculture, social vulnerability, Southeast, storm surge, tropical ǰȱǰȱ¢ǰȱǯǯȱȱ ǰȱȬȱǰȱ ȱǰȱ ǰȱ ę ȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱ ¢ȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱ¢ȱȱ¢ȱǰȱǰȱǰȱȱ Tribal Government or Non-governmental entity. Front Cover Images: ȱǰȱ ǰȱ¢ȱȱȱȱȱȱ ȂȱȱǻǼǯȱȱȱ¢ȱ ȱȱȱȱDZȱ ȱ¢ȱȱȱ ȱǰȱ¢ȱȱȱȱȱDzȱ¢ȱȱ ȱȱ ȱȱȱǰȱȱ ǯȱDzȱȱȱȱǰȱ¢ȱȱ ȱȱȱȱȱDzȱȱ ȱȱȱǻǼȱȱȱ ȱǰȱ ¢ȱȱDzȱȱĚ ȱȱȱȱȱǰȱ¢ȱȱȱȱ ȱDzȱȱȱȱǰȱǰȱǰȱȱĴǯ About This Series This report is published as one of a series of technical inputs to the Third National ȱȱǻǼȱǯȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱ ȱȱ ȱȱȱȱȱŗşşŖǰȱ ȱȱȱȱȱȱȱ and Congress every four years on the status of climate change science and impacts. The NCA informs the nation about already observed changes, the current status of the climate, and anticipated trends for the future. The NCA report process integrates ęȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱ¢ȱęȱȱ ęȱȱȱȱ ǯȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱ- ȱȱȱȱȱ¢ȱǯǯȱ£ǰȱȱȱȱȱ¢ȱȱ ȱȱȱ¢ȱȱȱȱȱȂȱǯ ȱȱȱŘŖŗŗǰȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱȱ¡ȱȱ ǰȱȱ¢ǰȱȱȱȱǰȱȬȱ£- ǰȱȱǰȱȱȱǰȱ ȱȱȱȱȱȱ Ĵȱȱȱȱȱǯȱ ȱǰȱȱȱȱǰȱȱ ȱȱ ȱȱȱȱȱȱǰȱ ȱȱȱȱȱ input reports highlighting past climate trends, projected climate change, and impacts ȱęȱȱȱȱǯȱȱȱȱȱ ȱȱȱ- ing this technical input.
    [Show full text]
  • Land Use Legacies and the Future of Southern Appalachia
    Society and Natural Resources, 19:175-190 Taylor & Francis Copyright 02006 Taylor & Francis LLC ,,&F,Grn", ISSN: 0894-1920 print/ 1521-0723 online 0 DOI: 10.1080/08941920500394857 Land Use Legacies and the Future of Southern Appalachia TED L. GRAGSON Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA PAUL V. BOLSTAD Department of Forest Resources, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA Southern Appalachian forests have apparently recovered from extractive land use practices during the 19th and 20th centuries, yet the legacy of this use endures in terrestrial and aquatic systems of the region. Thefocus on shallow time or the telling of stories about the past circumscribes the ability to anticipate the most likely out- comes of the trajectory of changeforecast for the Southeast as the "Old South" con- tinues its transformation into the "New South." We review land use research of the Coweeta Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) project that addresses the nature and extent of past andpresent human land use, how land use has affected the struc- ture and function of terrestrial and aquatic communities, and the forces guiding the anticipated trajectory of change. Unlike development in the western or northeastern regions of the United States, the southeastern region has few practical, political, or geographical boundaries to the urban sprawl that is now developing. Keywords aquatic communities, land use, land-use decision making, legacy, reforestation, southern Appalachia, terrestrial communities, urban sprawl In different locations around the world and for diverse reasons, lands once dedicated to extractive use have been abandoned and forest vegetation has expanded (e.g., Foster 1992).
    [Show full text]
  • Mummies and Mummification Practices in the Southern and Southwestern United States Mahmoud Y
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Karl Reinhard Papers/Publications Natural Resources, School of 1998 Mummies and mummification practices in the southern and southwestern United States Mahmoud Y. El-Najjar Yarmouk University, Irbid, Jordan Thomas M. J. Mulinski Chicago, Illinois Karl Reinhard University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/natresreinhard El-Najjar, Mahmoud Y.; Mulinski, Thomas M. J.; and Reinhard, Karl, "Mummies and mummification practices in the southern and southwestern United States" (1998). Karl Reinhard Papers/Publications. 13. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/natresreinhard/13 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Natural Resources, School of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Karl Reinhard Papers/Publications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Published in MUMMIES, DISEASE & ANCIENT CULTURES, Second Edition, ed. Aidan Cockburn, Eve Cockburn, and Theodore A. Reyman. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. 7 pp. 121–137. Copyright © 1998 Cambridge University Press. Used by permission. Mummies and mummification practices in the southern and southwestern United States MAHMOUD Y. EL-NAJJAR, THOMAS M.J. MULINSKI AND KARL J. REINHARD Mummification was not intentional for most North American prehistoric cultures. Natural mummification occurred in the dry areas ofNorth America, where mummies have been recovered from rock shelters, caves, and over­ hangs. In these places, corpses desiccated and spontaneously mummified. In North America, mummies are recovered from four main regions: the south­ ern and southwestern United States, the Aleutian Islands, and the Ozark Mountains ofArkansas.
    [Show full text]
  • A Study of Faulkner's Religious Critical Thought Based on the Image of Black Women
    2019 5th International Conference on Economics, Management and Humanities Science (ECOMHS 2019) A Study of Faulkner's Religious Critical Thought Based on the Image of Black Women Shi Qin Shanghai Open University Chongming Branch, Shanghai, China Keywords: Faulkner; religion outlook; black female; image-building; Southern Renaissance Abstract: In the 20th century, the famous American writer William Faulkner grew up in the "Bible Belt" of the southern United States. Due to the influence of religious and cultural environment, Faulkner infiltrated a strong religious color into his works, reflecting his complex diversity of religious thoughts. As a representative of the southern Renaissance, Faulkner created numerous black female images in different periods. Through attention and characterization of the black women at the bottom of the southern society under the white rule, he reveals the fact that the southern religion and the decayed and evil old southern cultural tradition are mutually integrated and accelerate the collapse of the old south. This paper studies and interprets the artistic depiction of the special group of black women, which is the artistic expression of Faulkner's critical thoughts of southern religion and his humanitarian spirit in the southern Renaissance. 1. Introduction William Faulkner was a famous American writer in the 20th century and an outstanding representative of southern literature. In 1950, he won the Nobel Prize for literature for his "powerful and unique artistic contribution to the American novel". Faulkner, who grew up in the southern United States with a strong religious culture, integrated the ubiquitous religious elements in his series of novels of Yoknapatawpha, the representative of his highest artistic achievement.
    [Show full text]
  • Afro-Caribbeans and the New Great Migration to Atlanta
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works All Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects 2-2015 On the Midnight Train to Georgia: Afro-Caribbeans and the New Great Migration to Atlanta LaToya Asantelle Tavernier Graduate Center, City University of New York How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/gc_etds/630 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] ON THE MIDNIGHT TRAIN TO GEORGIA: AFRO-CARIBBEANS AND THE NEW GREAT MIGRATION TO ATLANTA by LATOYA A. TAVERNIER A dissertation submitted to the Graduate Faculty in Sociology in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, The City University of New York. 2015 © 2015 LATOYA A. TAVERNIER All Rights Reserved ii This manuscript has been read and accepted for the Graduate Faculty in Sociology in satisfaction of the dissertation requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Prof. Vilna Bashi Treitler Date Chair of Examining Committee Professor Philip Kasinitz Date Executive Officer Prof. Philip Kasinitz Prof. Nancy Foner Prof. Charles Green Supervisory Committee THE CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK iii Abstract ON THE MIDNIGHT TRAIN TO GEORGIA: AFRO-CARIBBEANS AND THE NEW GREAT MIGRATION TO ATLANTA by LaToya A. Tavernier Advisor: Vilna Bashi Treitler In the 21 st century, Atlanta, Georgia has become a major new immigrant destination. This study focuses on the migration of Afro-Caribbeans to Atlanta and uses data collected from in-depth interviews, ethnography, and the US Census to understand: 1) the factors that have contributed to the emergence of Atlanta as a new destination for Afro-Caribbean immigrants and 2) the ways in which Atlanta’s large African American population, and its growing immigrant population, shape the incorporation of Afro-Caribbeans, as black immigrants, into the southern city.
    [Show full text]
  • Religion, Politics, and Belonging in a Southern Community
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2017 The Hospitable South: Religion, Politics, And Belonging In A Southern Community Betsie Garner University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Sociology Commons Recommended Citation Garner, Betsie, "The Hospitable South: Religion, Politics, And Belonging In A Southern Community" (2017). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 2299. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2299 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2299 For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Hospitable South: Religion, Politics, And Belonging In A Southern Community Abstract This dissertation interrogates the so-called myth of Southern hospitality. I review the historical origins of hospitality on antebellum plantations and engage with theoretical distinctions that have been made between hospitality as discourse and hospitality as practice. Given decades of social and political change in the region, I ask, how is Southern hospitality practiced today, and what are the consequences? I draw on ethnographic and interview data from a community study in Rockdale County, Georgia to explore how the culture of Southern hospitality became manifested as a set of religious practices through which residents determined who did and did not belong in their local community. Originally a mostly-white farming community, Rockdale had witnessed decades of dramatic population growth and diversification during Metro Atlanta’s rapid expansion. I explain how changes like the arrival of immigrants and growth of non-white populations made the community a fitting place for observing how Southern hospitality, with its ethos of gracious hosts and warm welcomes, was actually put into practice.
    [Show full text]
  • USDA Midwest and Northern Forests Regional Climate Hub: Assessment of Climate Change Vulnerability and Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies
    USDA Midwest and Northern Forests Regional Climate Hub: Assessment of Climate Change Vulnerability and Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies Photo Credit: (Betts, 2011) Authors: Jerry Hatfield, Midwest Hub Lead; Christopher Swanston, Northern Forests Sub Hub Lead; Maria Janowiak, Northern Forests Sub Hub; Rachel F. Steele, National Climate Hubs Coordinator, Washington D.C. Midwest Hub National Laboratory for Agriculture and the Environment 2110 University Blvd. Ames, Iowa 50011 Northern Forests Sub Hub USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station Forestry Sciences Lab Houghton, MI March 2015 Contributors: Our thanks to Jon Hempel, NRCS; Juliet Bochicchio, RD; Wendy Hall, APHIS; Marlene Cole, APHIS; Sharon Hestvik, RMA; and John Whitaker, FSA. We acknowledge ICF International for its contributions to the Greenhouse Gas Profile. Edited by: Terry Anderson, ARS Suggested Citation: Hatfield, J., C. Swanston, M. Janowiak, R. Steele, J. Hempel, J. Bochicchio, W. Hall, M. Cole, S. Hestvik, and J. Whitaker, 2015: Midwest and Northern Forests Regional Climate Hub Assessment of Climate Change Vulnerability and Adaptation and Mitigation Strategies, T. Anderson, Eds., United States Department of Agriculture, 55 pp. http://climatehubs.oce.usda.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/Midwest%20Region%20Vulnerability%20Assessm ent%203_20_2015.pdf Contents Letter from the Regional Leads .................................................................................................................... 5 1. Introduction ..........................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Shrimps, Lobsters, and Crabs of the Atlantic Coast of the Eastern United States, Maine to Florida
    SHRIMPS, LOBSTERS, AND CRABS OF THE ATLANTIC COAST OF THE EASTERN UNITED STATES, MAINE TO FLORIDA AUSTIN B.WILLIAMS SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION PRESS Washington, D.C. 1984 © 1984 Smithsonian Institution. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Williams, Austin B. Shrimps, lobsters, and crabs of the Atlantic coast of the Eastern United States, Maine to Florida. Rev. ed. of: Marine decapod crustaceans of the Carolinas. 1965. Bibliography: p. Includes index. Supt. of Docs, no.: SI 18:2:SL8 1. Decapoda (Crustacea)—Atlantic Coast (U.S.) 2. Crustacea—Atlantic Coast (U.S.) I. Title. QL444.M33W54 1984 595.3'840974 83-600095 ISBN 0-87474-960-3 Editor: Donald C. Fisher Contents Introduction 1 History 1 Classification 2 Zoogeographic Considerations 3 Species Accounts 5 Materials Studied 8 Measurements 8 Glossary 8 Systematic and Ecological Discussion 12 Order Decapoda , 12 Key to Suborders, Infraorders, Sections, Superfamilies and Families 13 Suborder Dendrobranchiata 17 Infraorder Penaeidea 17 Superfamily Penaeoidea 17 Family Solenoceridae 17 Genus Mesopenaeiis 18 Solenocera 19 Family Penaeidae 22 Genus Penaeus 22 Metapenaeopsis 36 Parapenaeus 37 Trachypenaeus 38 Xiphopenaeus 41 Family Sicyoniidae 42 Genus Sicyonia 43 Superfamily Sergestoidea 50 Family Sergestidae 50 Genus Acetes 50 Family Luciferidae 52 Genus Lucifer 52 Suborder Pleocyemata 54 Infraorder Stenopodidea 54 Family Stenopodidae 54 Genus Stenopus 54 Infraorder Caridea 57 Superfamily Pasiphaeoidea 57 Family Pasiphaeidae 57 Genus
    [Show full text]
  • Religious Practice of Enslaved African Americans, Selections from The
    National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox The Making of African American Identity: Vol. I, 1500-1865 RELIGIOUS PRACTICE of enslaved African Americans in the southern United States *Selections from the WPA interviews, 1936-1938 Over 2300 former slaves were interviewed during the Great Depression of the 1930s by members of the Federal Writers' Project, a New Deal agency in the Works Progress Administration (WPA). Among the suggested questions were these on religious practice: – Did the slaves have a church on your plantation? – Did they read the Bible? – Who was your favorite preacher? Your favorite spirituals? – Tell about the baptizing: baptizing songs. Funerals and funeral songs . – What do you think of voodoo? Jenny Proctor, ca. 1937 Due to the nature of the questions, and because the interviewees were enslaved from “Dey wasn’t no church for de slaves the 1820s to 1865, their responses relate primarily to Christian practice (except when but we goes to de white folks arbor addressing the inquiry about voodoo). Although Muslim Africans were captured and on Sunday evenin’.” transported to the Americas, primarily in the 1700s, no reference to Muslim practice was found in the WPA narratives during the research for this Resource Toolbox, Note: Selections from the narratives are presented as transcribed. Black interviewees often referred to themselves with terms now considered offensive. Some white inter- viewers, despite project guidelines for transcribing the narratives, used stereotypical patterns of representing black speech. See “A Note on the Language of the Narratives” at lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/snhtml/snlang.html and “Guidelines for Interviewers” at national humanitiescenter.org/pds/maai/wpanarrsuggestions.pdf.
    [Show full text]
  • Understanding Very High Rates of Young Child Poverty in the South
    Issue BrIef No. 21 Carsey Summer 2010 i n s t i t u t e understanding Very High rates of young Child Poverty in the south M a r y b e t H J. Mattingly and Cat H e r i n e t u r C o t t e - s e a b u r y ore children live in poverty in the rural south than in 2008, the federal poverty threshold for a couple with two in any other region of the country. in 2008, 17 children in the united states was $21,834.3 percent of families with children under age 18 in The very youngest children are particularly vulnerable. Mthe south lived in poverty, according to the american Com- nationally, the poverty rate for children under age 6 has been munity survey (aCs) (see table 1).1 in contrast, an estimated increasing slowly but steadily from 19 percent in 2000 to 21 13 percent of families in the northeast and 14 percent in percent in 2008.4 in the south, where young child poverty the Midwest and West were living below the poverty line. rates are consistently the highest, the percentage of children under age 6 in poverty stood at almost 24 percent in 2008. Poverty is alarmingly high in rural areas and central cities in the south, where nearly one in three children under age 6 now lives in poverty.5 some southern states experience far Key Findings higher rates. in this brief, we outline some of the demograph- • Poverty rates are significantly higher in the South ic patterns associated with high poverty rates among children 6 for all families (11 percent), and for families with in the south.
    [Show full text]