Emma's Postcard Album: Black Lives in the Early Twentieth Century (Atlantic Migrations and the African Diaspora)
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Review\nFaith Mitchell’s Emma's Postcard Album is a stunningly original and highly compelling book, a one-of-a kind work, and an extraordinary contribution to our understanding of not only African American history and cultural studies, but also US history and American cultural studies. I know of no work of its kind for any period: an artistically presented, well-organized, deeply textured, and probing treatment of an African American family postcard collection. Mitchell vividly presents, perceptively contextualizes, and insightfully analyzes this extraordinary collection of family postcards from the early twentieth century. This artful hybrid work perceptively bridges a number of fields and categories, including the history of postcards, turn-of-the-century African American history and culture―in particular, the history of rural African Americans, and family history. -- Waldo E. Martin, Jr., Alexander F. and May T. Morrison Professor of American History and Citizenship at the University of California, Berkeley, and coauthor with Joshua Bloom of Black against Empire: The History and Politics of the Black Panther Party\nEmma's Postcard Album offers a refreshingly different way of understanding the history of African American life in the early twentieth century. This is a subject that countless authors have written about before, of course; but to understand it by examining an individual’s surviving postcard collection offers fresh insight into the lived experience of African Americans at that time. I’ve studied the history of postcards in North America for several years now and have read many secondary works on the subject. But I cannot recall another book that uses postcards quite this way. -- Matthew Griffis, author of New Orleans in Golden Age Postcards\nEmma’s Postcard Album provides an intriguing ‘gift from the past’ through insightful understandings of how postcards were the social media of the turn of the twentieth century for informed African Americans. As an anthropologist, genealogist, and now deltiologist, Mitchell artfully examines the images and reflections of life and work as her grandmother Emma and other family members circumnavigated the boundaries of structural racism as it was solidified in that Reconstruction era. The postcards illustrate how values, sense of agency, and the significance of family relations were instrumental in maintaining and nurturing African American life. -- Lynn Bolles, professor emerita of the Harriet Tubman Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park\nThe turn of the twentieth century was an extraordinarily difficult period for African Americans, a time of unchecked lynchings, mob attacks, and rampant Jim Crow segregation. During these bleak years, Emma Crawford, a young African American woman living in Pennsylvania, corresponded by postcard with friends and family members and collected the cards she received from all over the country. Her album―spanning from 1906 to 1910 and analyzed in Emma's Postcard Album―becomes an entry point into a deeply textured understanding of the nuances and complexities of African American lives and the survival strategies that enabled people “to make a way from no way.” As snippets of lived experience, eye-catching visual images, and reflections of historical moments, the cards in the collection become sources for understanding not only African American life, but also broader American history and culture.\nIn Emma's Postcard Album, Faith Mitchell innovatively places the contents of this postcard collection into specific historic and biographical contexts and provides a new interpretation of postcards as life writings, a much-neglected aspect of scholarship. Through these techniques, a riveting world that is far too little known is revealed, and new insights are gained into the perspectives and experience of African Americans. Capping off these contributions, the text is a visual feast,
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