
Black Lives in Alaska
Description
Documents the rich history of Black life in Alaska since the 1850s
The history of Black Alaskans runs deep and spans generations. Decades before statehood and earlier even than the Klondike gold rush of the 1890s, Black men and women participated in Alaska's politics and culture. They hunted whales, patrolled the seas, built roads, served in the military, and opened businesses, even as they endured racism and fought injustices. Into the twentieth century, Alaska's Black residents were often part of the larger, nationwide freedom struggle. At the same time, Black settlers found themselves in a far different context than elsewhere in the United States, as Alaska's strategic military location, economic reliance on oil, and unique racial landscape influenced how Black Alaskans made a home for themselves in the northwesternmost corner of the country.
Centering the agency and diversity of Black Alaskans, Black Lives in Alaska chronicles how Alaska's Black population, though small, has had an outsized impact on the culture and civic life of the region. Alaska's history of race relations and civil rights reminds the reader that the currents of discrimination and its responses--determination, activism, and perseverance--are American stories that might be explored in the unlikeliest of places.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Washington Press |
Publish Date | November 29, 2022 |
Pages | 304 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780295750934 |
Dimensions | 9.0 X 6.0 X 0.7 inches | 1.0 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"The authors' collaborative effort on Black Lives in Alaska has produced a solid work that will surely remain the definitive book on the subject for the foreseeable future. It is a wonderful contribution to the scholarship that has been produced by the new western historians and others on the topic of African Americans in the American West."
-- "Pacific Historical Review""Black Lives in Alaska provides a corrective to [the] flimsy narrative of the state's race relations."
-- "Anchorage Daily News""Hartman and Reamer brilliantly play off one another's strengths in history and journalism to craft a critical examination of a population that grew between the 1880s and early 1960s due to military service relocation and opportunities connected to oil production and defense-industry buildup during the Cold War."
-- "Pacific Northwest Quarterly (PNQ)""The book's scope, spanning from the mid-nineteenth to the twenty-first century, is as ambitious as it is comprehensive. Such preference for width over depth ends there, however, as the authors seek to leave no relevant stone unturned in their diligent presentation of Alaska's Black histories."
-- "H-Net Reviews"Earn by promoting books