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Marcia Chatelain

    Marcia Chatelain est une historienne dont le travail explore les histoires complexes des femmes et des filles afro-américaines, abordant des thèmes d'identité, de communauté et de résilience. Ses recherches examinent comment les structures sociales, en particulier le capitalisme et l'industrie alimentaire, s'entrecroisent avec les droits civiques et l'identité noire. L'approche de Chatelain est profondément ancrée dans la recherche d'archives et dans un engagement à rendre les récits historiques accessibles et pertinents pour les discussions contemporaines sur la race et le genre.

    South Side Girls
    Franchise
    • Franchise

      • 324pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,9(1387)Évaluer

      Often blamed for the rising rates of obesity and diabetes among black Americans, fast food restaurants like McDonald’s have long symbolized capitalism’s villainous effects on our nation’s most vulnerable communities. But how did fast food restaurants so thoroughly saturate black neighborhoods in the first place?In Franchise, acclaimed historian Marcia Chatelain uncovers a surprising history of cooperation among fast food companies, black capitalists, and civil rights leaders, who—in the troubled years after King’s assassination—believed they found an economic answer to the problem of racial inequality. With the discourse of social welfare all but evaporated, federal programs under presidents Johnson and Nixon promoted a new vision for racial justice: that the franchising of fast food restaurants, by black citizens in their own neighborhoods, could finally improve the quality of black life.Synthesizing years of research, Franchise tells a troubling success story of an industry that blossomed the very moment a freedom movement began to wither.

      Franchise
    • Marcia Chatelain recasts Chicago's Great Migration through the lens of black girlhood. She argues that the construction of black girlhood in Chicago between 1910 and 1940 reflected the black community's anxieties about urbanization and its meaning for racial progress, as well as responses to major events and social crises.

      South Side Girls