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Black Physicians in the Jim Crow South, 18801960
Thomas
J. Ward Jr.
The challenges of practicing medicine while black
In this comprehensive account, Thomas J. Ward examines the development
of the African American medical profession in the South. Under segregation,
the white medical profession provided inadequate service at best
to African American patients. Paradoxically, African Americans could
gain financial success and upward mobility by becoming doctors themselves.
Ward tracks the rise of African American medical schools, professional
organizations, and hospitals. He also explores the difficulties
that African American physicians faced as an elite group within
a subjugated caste, and the many ways in which their education,
prestige, and relative wealth put them at odds with the southern
caste system. Within the black community, in turn, this prestige
often pushed doctors into the public sphere as business leaders,
civic spokesmen, and political activists.
Drawing on a variety of sources from oral histories to the records
of professional organizations, this book illuminates the contradictions
of race and class in the South and provides valuable new insight
into class divisions within African American communities in the
era of segregation.
Tom Ward takes us behind the Jim Crow wall in this comprehensive
andmoving study of African-American physicians. . . . Vicitmized
by the white medical establishment as well as the larger southern
society, the black doctor was at the same time a person of influence
and relative wealth inside his own community. In exploring these
apparent contradictions, Ward tells us much about race and class
in twentieth-century America.
John Dittmer, author of
Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi (Illinois, 1995)
2003
6" X 9"
300 pages
$34.95, cloth (s)
1-55728-756-2
Thomas J. Ward Jr. is an assistant professor of history
at Rockhurst University. He was the writer and co-producer
of Mississippi Voices: A Trip through the Twentieth Century, a
public radio program, and was an assistant editor for the
Mississippi Oral History Project.
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