Difference between revisions of "Jim Crow"

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According to PBS,  
 
According to PBS,  
:On the eve of the Civil War, the universal image of the silly Jim Crow minstrel character provided southern [[white]]s with one of many stereotypical images of black inferiority that were a fundamental component of white popular culture. By the 1890s, the term had come to mean the separation of blacks from whites and the general customs and laws that subordinated blacks as an inferior people. [http://www.jimcrowhistory.org/scripts/jimcrow/glossary.cgi]
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:On the eve of the Civil War, the universal image of the silly Jim Crow minstrel character provided southern [[white]]s with one of many stereotypical images of black inferiority that were a fundamental component of white popular culture. By the 1890s, the term had come to mean the separation of blacks from whites and the general customs and laws that subordinated blacks as an inferior people. <ref>http://www.jimcrowhistory.org/scripts/jimcrow/glossary.cgi</ref>
  
 
The Center for American Music says:
 
The Center for American Music says:
:The "father of American minstrelsy" was Thomas Dartmouth "Daddy" Rice, who, between 1828 and 1831, developed a song-and-dance routine in which he impersonated an old, crippled black slave, dubbed Jim Crow. [http://www.pitt.edu/~amerimus/minstrel.htm]
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:The "father of American minstrelsy" was Thomas Dartmouth "Daddy" Rice, who, between 1828 and 1831, developed a song-and-dance routine in which he impersonated an old, crippled black slave, dubbed Jim Crow. <ref>http://www.pitt.edu/~amerimus/minstrel.htm</ref>
  
 
The phrase "Jim Crow" is also commonly used to refer to race relations in the American south before the advent of the [[Civil Rights]] movement, as well as to the laws which codified and maintained those relations.
 
The phrase "Jim Crow" is also commonly used to refer to race relations in the American south before the advent of the [[Civil Rights]] movement, as well as to the laws which codified and maintained those relations.
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==References==
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<References/>
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 20:01, October 8, 2007

minstrel character "Jim Crow"

According to PBS,

On the eve of the Civil War, the universal image of the silly Jim Crow minstrel character provided southern whites with one of many stereotypical images of black inferiority that were a fundamental component of white popular culture. By the 1890s, the term had come to mean the separation of blacks from whites and the general customs and laws that subordinated blacks as an inferior people. [1]

The Center for American Music says:

The "father of American minstrelsy" was Thomas Dartmouth "Daddy" Rice, who, between 1828 and 1831, developed a song-and-dance routine in which he impersonated an old, crippled black slave, dubbed Jim Crow. [2]

The phrase "Jim Crow" is also commonly used to refer to race relations in the American south before the advent of the Civil Rights movement, as well as to the laws which codified and maintained those relations.

References

  1. http://www.jimcrowhistory.org/scripts/jimcrow/glossary.cgi
  2. http://www.pitt.edu/~amerimus/minstrel.htm

See also

External links