| Jelly
Roll
A Black Neighborhood in a Southern Mill Town
Charles Thomas
A classic Arkansas ethnography, reissued
"Jelly
Roll is a compelling portrait of an African American
working-class community based on the distinctive, powerful
voices of the residents. Charles Thomas incisively reveals
how three generations faced troubled times and deferred opportunities
as traditional bonds frayed. This new printing reintroduces
a notable work that reminds readers of the vitality and complexity
of rural communities adapting to change."
—Ben Johnson, author of Arkansas in Modern America
Jelly
Roll, a small community of African Americans living in company
housing outside the Calion Lumber Company in Calion, Arkansas,
is the subject of this classic Arkansas ethnography written
by Charles E. Thomas, an anthropologist whose family owned
the mill. Originally published in 1986, Jelly Roll
combines Thomas’s unique perspective as both an academician
and the grandson of the sawmill’s founder. Thomas conducted
extensive interviews covering three generations among the
eighty-four households forming this community, illuminating
the residents’ lives in an unusually thorough and nuanced
fashion.
Now back
in print and enhanced with later interviews revealing attitudes
of growing restlessness over the slow movement toward racial
equality and opportunity, Jelly Roll will be a welcome
reference for anyone interested in African American studies,
the South, or the sawmill industry.
Charles
E. Thomas was a professor of anthropology
at Washington University for seventeen years. He returned
to his hometown and the Calion Lumber Company in 1975 and
has run the company ever since
May
6 x 9, 164 pages
8 images
$19.95 (s) paper
978-1-55728-982-7
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