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A classic examination of the lived realities of American racism,
now with a new foreword from Pulitzer Prize winner Isabel
Wilkerson. First published in 1941, Deep South is a landmark work
of anthropology, documenting in startling and nuanced detail the
everyday realities of American racism. Living undercover in
Depression-era Mississippi-not revealing their scholarly project or
even their association with one another-groundbreaking Black
scholar Allison Davis and his White co-authors, Burleigh and Mary
Gardner, delivered an unprecedented examination of how race shaped
nearly every aspect of twentieth-century life in the United States.
Their analysis notably revealed the importance of caste and class
to Black and White worldviews, and they anatomized the many ways
those views are constructed, solidified, and reinforced. This
reissue of the 1965 abridged edition, with a new foreword from
Pulitzer Prize winner Isabel Wilkerson-who acknowledges the book's
profound importance to her own work-proves that Deep South remains
as relevant as ever, a crucial work on the concept of caste and how
it continues to inform the myriad varieties of American inequality.
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