To Live and Dine in Dixie
The Evolution of Urban Food Culture in the Jim Crow South
Title Details
Pages: 224
Illustrations: 9 b&w photos
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
Formats
Paperback
Pub Date: 05/15/2015
ISBN: 9-780-8203-4759-2
List Price: $27.95
Hardcover
Pub Date: 05/15/2015
ISBN: 9-780-8203-4758-5
List Price: $120.95
Subsidies and Partnerships
Published in association with Southern Foodways Alliance
To Live and Dine in Dixie
The Evolution of Urban Food Culture in the Jim Crow South
How cultural notions contributed to the racial segregation of cafés and restaurants in the American South
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This book explores the changing food culture of the urban American South during the Jim Crow era by examining how race, ethnicity, class, and gender contributed to the development and maintenance of racial segregation in public eating places. Focusing primarily on the 1900s to the 1960s, Angela Jill Cooley identifies the cultural differences between activists who saw public eating places like urban lunch counters as sites of political participation and believed access to such spaces a right of citizenship, and white supremacists who interpreted desegregation as a challenge to property rights and advocated local control over racial issues.
Significant legal changes occurred across this period as the federal government sided at first with the white supremacists but later supported the unprecedented progress of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which—among other things—required desegregation of the nation’s restaurants. Because the culture of white supremacy that contributed to racial segregation in public accommodations began in the white southern home, Cooley also explores domestic eating practices in nascent southern cities and reveals how the most private of activities—cooking and dining— became a cause for public concern from the meeting rooms of local women’s clubs to the halls of the U.S. Congress.
—Marcie Cohen Ferris, author of The Edible South: The Power of Food and the Making of an American Region
—Elizabeth Engelhardt, author of A Mess of Greens: Southern Gender and Southern Food
—Catarina Passidomo, Southern Register
—Megan Elias, H-Net Reviews
—Midwest Book Review
—Wendell McKay, Repast
—Ann Folino White, Journal of American History
Short-listed
James Beard Book Awards, James Beard Foundation
Winner
Top Food Book, Booksaboutfood.com
Winner
ASFS Book Award, Association for the Study of Food and Society