We Got By: A Black Family’s Journey in the Heartland: Trillium Books
Autor Ric S. Sheffielden Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 aug 2022
Spanning four generations and assessing the legacies of traumatic events (arrests, murders, suicide) that are inextricable from the racial dynamics of the small community his family called home, this gripping memoir is a heartfelt, clear-eyed, and rare chronicle of Black life in the rural Midwest. Experiencing the burden of racism among people who refused to accept that such a thing existed only made the isolation feel that much worse to Sheffield and his relatives. And yet, they overcame the obstacles and managed to persist: they got by.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814258422
ISBN-10: 0814258425
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: 42 b&w images
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Trillium
Seria Trillium Books
ISBN-10: 0814258425
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: 42 b&w images
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Trillium
Seria Trillium Books
Recenzii
“This book is a powerfully written portrayal of Black Midwestern rural life in the early part of the twentieth century. The gripping tale of how Sheffield’s family ‘made a way out of no way’ in an oftentimes hostile outside world, We Got By will shake readers to the very bottoms of their souls.” —Allen Ballard, author of Breaching Jericho’s Walls: A Twentieth-Century African American Life
“Crafted with heart and a keen eye for detail, We Got By delivers a vivid and engaging portrait of small-town Black life. Sheffield’s courageous storytelling bears witness to a significant but seldom explored chapter in the history of race in America.” —Howard L. Sacks, author of Way Up North in Dixie: A Black Family's Claim to the Confederate Anthem
“We Got By reveals secrets that cry out to be shared. With authority and passion, Sheffield has written a history of the heart—not only his own but that of a people.” —Murray Horwitz, NPR broadcaster and Tony Award–winning playwright of Ain’t Misbehavin’
“Crafted with heart and a keen eye for detail, We Got By delivers a vivid and engaging portrait of small-town Black life. Sheffield’s courageous storytelling bears witness to a significant but seldom explored chapter in the history of race in America.” —Howard L. Sacks, author of Way Up North in Dixie: A Black Family's Claim to the Confederate Anthem
“We Got By reveals secrets that cry out to be shared. With authority and passion, Sheffield has written a history of the heart—not only his own but that of a people.” —Murray Horwitz, NPR broadcaster and Tony Award–winning playwright of Ain’t Misbehavin’
Notă biografică
Ric S. Sheffield is Peter M. Rutkoff Distinguished Teaching Professor at Kenyon College and former Assistant Attorney General for the State of Ohio. He is founding director and principal investigator for the Knox County Black History Archives, a website devoted the experiences of Black Americans in rural Ohio. He has authored numerous articles in the field of legal studies.
Extras
Once widowed and once divorced, Lon Hammonds had come to make a good living for himself and his family over the years. By the time that he met my grandmother, he was by all accounts a distinguished older gentleman. Regarded by the unmarried colored women around town as a good catch even as he neared sixty, he enjoyed the attention that he received from those who were forward enough to show their interest in him. But there was something about this newcomer in town who had recently visited his church. Unlike the handful of other unmarried ladies of the church, my grandmother seemed to pay him no mind. His frequent and obvious flirtations seemed to have little effect upon the mysterious woman who, he had learned, was boarding with Aunt Becky on the west end of town. Didn't she know who he was? How long could she possibly resist his charms? It likely was a combination of her light gray eyes that captivated him on the rare occasion when she was willing to look into his and the challenge posed by her seeming disinterest; he was immediately attracted to Bertha Fisher from the outset. In very short order, he had declared to his brother that she was "the one" and was dead set on getting her.
With jet-black, wavy hair that refused to stay tucked up under her hat, Bertha had a natural beauty that didn't require the assistance of fine clothes and piles of makeup, things that she couldn't have afforded even if she wanted them. She arrived in town from Coshocton, where she had gone to live with her sister, Leona, long before the untimely death of Arthur Fisher, her husband and the father of her girls. Art and Bertha had been going through some rough times in their marriage; she was tired of his infidelities and empty promises to put an end to them.
Making the decision to leave Barnesville to go live with Leona was hard enough; it was complicated further by the fact that Bertha was unable financially to take her two girls with her. So, her brother and his wife agreed to take one of them for a spell, and her father agreed to look after the other. She was to send for them when she found work and got settled. Leaving Art was also difficult because she still loved him. She, like many country girls, had the misfortune of falling for the first man to come into her life. He made her feel special, something that she had never experienced, and his attention was what she felt she needed more than anything else. Just as easily as he swept her off her feet, he repeatedly hurt and disappointed her. She hated to admit it to herself, but it soon became obvious to her and many others that he was perhaps the furthest thing from being a good husband.
With jet-black, wavy hair that refused to stay tucked up under her hat, Bertha had a natural beauty that didn't require the assistance of fine clothes and piles of makeup, things that she couldn't have afforded even if she wanted them. She arrived in town from Coshocton, where she had gone to live with her sister, Leona, long before the untimely death of Arthur Fisher, her husband and the father of her girls. Art and Bertha had been going through some rough times in their marriage; she was tired of his infidelities and empty promises to put an end to them.
Making the decision to leave Barnesville to go live with Leona was hard enough; it was complicated further by the fact that Bertha was unable financially to take her two girls with her. So, her brother and his wife agreed to take one of them for a spell, and her father agreed to look after the other. She was to send for them when she found work and got settled. Leaving Art was also difficult because she still loved him. She, like many country girls, had the misfortune of falling for the first man to come into her life. He made her feel special, something that she had never experienced, and his attention was what she felt she needed more than anything else. Just as easily as he swept her off her feet, he repeatedly hurt and disappointed her. She hated to admit it to herself, but it soon became obvious to her and many others that he was perhaps the furthest thing from being a good husband.
Cuprins
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Making of Lon Hammonds
Chapter 2 Discovering the Real Bertha
Chapter 3 To Win Her Hand
Chapter 4 Helping Out During Hard Times
Chapter 5 More Than Just Faith on Trial
Chapter 6 Sewing on the Stripes
Chapter 7 Reading, Writing, and 'Rithmetic
Chapter 8 Miss Bronze Ohio
Chapter 9 Saying "I Do" and Then Doing It
Chapter 10 A Man's Pride
Chapter 11 The Unhappiest of Birthdays
Chapter 12 I'd Sweep the Streets If I Had To
Chapter 13 Managing to Get By
Chapter 14 Wanting a Carefree Life for Them
Chapter 15 Adventure in the Blood
Chapter 16 Just a Couple of Boys on Safari
Chapter 17 Innocent Child's Play
Chapter 18 Ina Mae to the Rescue
Chapter 19 George Helps Her Move On
Chapter 20 It's Okay to Remarry
Chapter 21 I Gotta Get Out of Here
Chapter 22 If Not for Bad Luck, He'd Have No Luck at All
Chapter 23 Consequences of Racism
Chapter 24 Off to the Big City
Epilogue Thank You 'Til You're Better Paid
Chapter 1 The Making of Lon Hammonds
Chapter 2 Discovering the Real Bertha
Chapter 3 To Win Her Hand
Chapter 4 Helping Out During Hard Times
Chapter 5 More Than Just Faith on Trial
Chapter 6 Sewing on the Stripes
Chapter 7 Reading, Writing, and 'Rithmetic
Chapter 8 Miss Bronze Ohio
Chapter 9 Saying "I Do" and Then Doing It
Chapter 10 A Man's Pride
Chapter 11 The Unhappiest of Birthdays
Chapter 12 I'd Sweep the Streets If I Had To
Chapter 13 Managing to Get By
Chapter 14 Wanting a Carefree Life for Them
Chapter 15 Adventure in the Blood
Chapter 16 Just a Couple of Boys on Safari
Chapter 17 Innocent Child's Play
Chapter 18 Ina Mae to the Rescue
Chapter 19 George Helps Her Move On
Chapter 20 It's Okay to Remarry
Chapter 21 I Gotta Get Out of Here
Chapter 22 If Not for Bad Luck, He'd Have No Luck at All
Chapter 23 Consequences of Racism
Chapter 24 Off to the Big City
Epilogue Thank You 'Til You're Better Paid
Descriere
A heartfelt, clear-eyed, and rare chronicle of Black life in the rural Midwest, spanning four generations.