Through Afro-America: An English Reading of the Race Problem
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About This Book
An English observer travels through the Southern United States and parts of the Caribbean and Central America to examine the racial question. Combining on-the-spot reportage and analytical chapters, the narrative surveys segregation, legal and political discrimination, education and industrial initiatives, religious influence, crime, and the economic conditions shaping Black and white communities. The author compares regional practices, weighs arguments for assimilation versus enforced separation, and discusses reform experiments such as industrial schooling and prohibition. Accounts of cities, institutions, and agricultural and industrial developments are used to broaden the inquiry and to draw conclusions about practical approaches to racial adjustment.
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