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Cutting Along the Color Line

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Today, black-owned barber shops play a central role in African American public life. The intimacy of commercial grooming encourages both confidentiality and camaraderie, which make the barber shop ...
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  • 15 December 2016
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Today, black-owned barber shops play a central role in African American public life. The intimacy of commercial grooming encourages both confidentiality and camaraderie, which make the barber shop an important gathering place for African American men to talk freely. But for many years preceding and even after the Civil War, black barbers endured a measure of social stigma for perpetuating inequality: though the profession offered economic mobility to black entrepreneurs, black barbers were obliged by custom to serve an exclusively white clientele. Quincy T. Mills traces the lineage from these nineteenth-century barbers to the bustling enterprises of today, demonstrating that the livelihood offered by the service economy was crucial to the development of a black commercial sphere and the barber shop as a democratic social space.

Cutting Along the Color Line chronicles the cultural history of black barber shops as businesses and civic institutions. Through several generations of barbers, Mills examines the transition from slavery to freedom in the nineteenth century, the early twentieth-century expansion of black consumerism, and the challenges of professionalization, licensing laws, and competition from white barbers. He finds that the profession played a significant though complicated role in twentieth-century racial politics: while the services of shaving and grooming were instrumental in the creation of socially acceptable black masculinity, barbering permitted the financial independence to maintain public spaces that fostered civil rights politics. This sweeping, engaging history of an iconic cultural establishment shows that black entrepreneurship was intimately linked to the struggle for equality.

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Price: $29.95
Pages: 336
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Date: 15 December 2016
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812223798
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / United States / 20th Century, History of the Americas, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / American / African American & Black Studies

"In Cutting Along the Color Line, Quincy Mills offers an unprecedented assessment of the complexities of black barbers and barbershops in nineteenth- and twentieth-century America."
Quincy T. Mills is Associate Professor of History at Vassar College.

Preface
Introduction

PART I. BARBERING IN SLAVERY AND FREEDOM
Chapter 1. Barbering for Freedom in Antebellum America
Chapter 2. The Politics of "Color-Line" Barber Shops After the Civil War
Chapter 3. Race, Regulation, and the Modern Barber Shop

PART II. BLACK BARBERS, PATRONS, AND PUBLIC SPACES
Chapter 4. Rise of the New Negro Barber
Chapter 5. Bigger Than a Haircut: Desegregation and the Barber Shop
Chapter 6. The Culture and Economy of Modern Black Barber Shops

Epilogue
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments