Reviews

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"Highly recommended for shedding light on a vital yet overlooked aspect of North Carolina's history and social evolution".
--The Midwest Book Review

"An invaluable contribution to the field."
--The Journal of American History

"A strength of this study stems from the author's access to often restricted resources, including personal papers and oral interviews. Her success in securing interviews and retrieving usually secretive information is commendable. Hornsby-Gutting has given us another avenue to explore how self-reliance, self-determination, and self-sufficiency affected southern African American culture and activism during the opening decades of the twentieth century."
--The Journal of Southern History Vol. LXXVI, No. 4

Using archival material from various sections of North Carolina, Hornsby-Gutting expertly weaves together a history previously lost. Persuasively, she notes that black men sought to move forward by "fashioning an African American manhood characterized by dignity and authority that would prove uplifting to their manhood and to the black community overall." Her analysis reveals that these values, standards, and activities fostered political projects for their descendents who were able to defeat Jim Crow. By analyzing the activities of black men through their interactions with black women, Hornsby-Gutting debunks the myth that African American men offered little in the way of leadership during these decades. She restores African American men to their rightful place as active participants in the struggle for racial equality.
--Journal of African American History, Vol. 96, No. 1

Seeks to revise our thinking about black male political activities at the beginning of Jim Crow. With this work, Hornsby-Gutting makes the first three decades of the twentieth century a moment in time when middle-class blacks threatened by Jim Crow violence also found ways to redefine themselves and challenge white oppression.
--The North Carolina Historical Review

A successful study of black manhood in the South at the turn of the century.
--Southern Studies

An important contribution to the grand narrative of black gendered leadership in the early twentieth century.
--Louisiana History

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