Consuming Lines of Difference: The Politics of Wealth and Poverty along the Color Line

dc.contributor.authorMullins, Paul R.
dc.contributor.authorLabode, Modupe
dc.contributor.authorJones, Lewis C.
dc.contributor.authorEssex, Michael E.
dc.contributor.authorKruse, Alex M.
dc.contributor.authorMuncy, G. Brandon
dc.date.accessioned2014-08-08T20:19:45Z
dc.date.available2014-08-08T20:19:45Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.description.abstractCommentators on African American life have often focused on poverty, evaded African American wealth, and ignored the ways genteel affluence and impoverishment were constructed along turn-of-the-century color lines. Documentary research and archaeology at the Madam CJ Walker home in Indianapolis, Indiana illuminates how the continuum of wealth and poverty was defined and negotiated by one of African America’s wealthiest early 20th century entrepreneurs. The project provides an opportunity to compare the ways in which wealth was defined and experienced along the color line in the early 20th century and how such notions of Black affluence shaped racialized definitions of poverty and materialityen_US
dc.identifier.citationMullins, P.R., Labode, M., Jones, L.C., Essex, M.E., Kruse, A.M., & Muncy, G.B. (2011). Consuming lines of difference: The politics of wealth and poverty along the color line. Historical Archaeology, 45(3), 140-150.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1805/4864
dc.titleConsuming Lines of Difference: The Politics of Wealth and Poverty along the Color Lineen_US
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