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Harlem, the making of a ghetto

Harlem, the making of a ghetto

Gilbert Osofsky

About this book

A great many books have been written about Harlem, but for social history none has surpassed Gilbert Osofsky's account of how a pleasant, pastoral upper-middle-class suburb of Manhattan turned into an appalling black slum within forty years. Mr. Osofsky sets his chronicle against the background of pre-Harlem black life in New York City and in the context of the radical changes in race relations in America in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He traces Harlem's change to the largest segregated neighborhood in the nation and then its fall to a slum. Throughout he neatly balances statistics and humanly revealing details.

Details

OL Work ID
OL16007623W

Subjects

African AmericansHistoryHarlem (new york, n.y.), historyAfrican americans, new york (state), new yorkNew york (n.y.), historyBlack People

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.