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To Serve the Living
Funeral Directors and the African American Way of Death
By Suzanne E. Smith · 2010
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32 pages
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    About this edition
    ISBN: 9780674267442, 0674267443
    Page count: 288
    Published: February 25, 2010
    Format: Ebook
    Language: English
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    Table of contents
    Harvard University Press
    From antebellum slavery to the twenty-first century, African American funeral directors have orchestrated funerals or “homegoing” ceremonies with dignity and pageantry. As entrepreneurs in a largely segregated trade, they were among the few black individuals in any community who were economically independent and not beholden to the local white power structure. Most important, their financial freedom gave them the ability to support the struggle for civil rights and, indeed, to serve the living as well as bury the dead. During the Jim Crow era, black funeral directors relied on racial segregation to secure their foothold in America’s capitalist marketplace. With the dawning of the civil rights age, these entrepreneurs were drawn into the movement to integrate American society, but were a...
    Source: Publisher
    Other editions
    To Serve the Living
    To Serve the Living
    25 Feb 2010
    Jun 2010
    Harvard University Press
    Harvard University Press
    Hardcover
    Ebook
    257 pages
    288 pages
    Common terms and phrases
    act
    active
    activists
    African American funeral
    Alabama
    Association
    August
    became
    began
    black funeral directors
    body
    boycott
    burial
    bury
    called
    campaign
    casket
    cemetery
    century
    Chicago Defender
    Church
    civil rights
    civil rights movement
    colored
    Company
    continued
    convention
    corpse
    cultural
    dead
    death
    Diggs
    directing
    early
    economic
    effort
    election
    embalming
    established
    faced
    fight
    final
    founded
    Freedom
    fu
    Funeral Home
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    About the work
    Originally published: February 25, 2010
    Subject: History / United States / 20th Century, Law / Right to Die, Political Science / Civics & Citizenship, Social Science / Death & Dying, Social Science / Ethnic Studies / American / African American & Black Studies, African Americans -- Funeral customs and rites -- Social life and customs, Funeral rites and ceremonies -- United States, Undertakers and undertaking -- United States, United States -- Social life and customsMORE
    Author
    Suzanne E. Smith
    Suzanne E. Smith
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