Shadow of the Plantation

$30.00

Author: Charles S. Johnson

Publisher: University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL

Date: 1934, first edition

215 pages, many period photographs

Condition: This is an ex libris volume formerly held by the Pasadena public library. It has been well read and well used. Some wear to the spine and corners. The binding is tight. No marginalia, rips, or dog-ears of the pages. No foxing. Overall, this is a solid reading copy.

This powerful book was the first published as a scholarly exploration of the ways in which the legacy of human enslavement continued to impact the lives, health, and wealth of Black individuals living in the American South. The author was a professor at Fisk University, an HBCU located in Nashville, TN.

Add To Cart

Author: Charles S. Johnson

Publisher: University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL

Date: 1934, first edition

215 pages, many period photographs

Condition: This is an ex libris volume formerly held by the Pasadena public library. It has been well read and well used. Some wear to the spine and corners. The binding is tight. No marginalia, rips, or dog-ears of the pages. No foxing. Overall, this is a solid reading copy.

This powerful book was the first published as a scholarly exploration of the ways in which the legacy of human enslavement continued to impact the lives, health, and wealth of Black individuals living in the American South. The author was a professor at Fisk University, an HBCU located in Nashville, TN.

Author: Charles S. Johnson

Publisher: University of Chicago Press, Chicago, IL

Date: 1934, first edition

215 pages, many period photographs

Condition: This is an ex libris volume formerly held by the Pasadena public library. It has been well read and well used. Some wear to the spine and corners. The binding is tight. No marginalia, rips, or dog-ears of the pages. No foxing. Overall, this is a solid reading copy.

This powerful book was the first published as a scholarly exploration of the ways in which the legacy of human enslavement continued to impact the lives, health, and wealth of Black individuals living in the American South. The author was a professor at Fisk University, an HBCU located in Nashville, TN.