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A layover stop in the African American great migration: identity,ruination, and memory
Authors:Alice Mah
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology, University of Warwick, Coventry, UKA.A.Mah@warwick.ac.uk
Abstract:Gone Home challenges dominant representations of Appalachia as white, placing in the foreground the life histories of African Americans who hail from the coalfields of eastern Kentucky. The book reveals how mass migration shapes subjectivities, examining two generations of African Americans who migrated into and out of the coalfields between 1910 and 1970. The coalfields were a layover stop in an intergenerational migration from the rural South to urban centres in the North, Midwest, and West. This review reflects on the significance of the layover stop, both empirically and conceptually. One of the key contributions of Gone Home is to show how the layover stop was important not only in terms of time and place, but also in terms of collective identity. The review concludes by reflecting on interconnected themes of industrial ruination and intergenerational memory.
Keywords:Ruination  coal mining  migration  Appalachia  collective identity  memory
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