Advanced Search

  • About & Contact
  • Browse Subjects
  • Catalogs
  • eBooks
  • News
  • Order
  • Rights
  • Permissions
  • Cart: [0]
  • Resources for:
  • Authors
  • Booksellers & Librarians
  • Educators
  • Journalists
  • Readers
Cover: The Land Was Ours: African American Beaches from Jim Crow to the Sunbelt South, from Harvard University PressCover: The Land Was Ours in HARDCOVER

The Land Was Ours

African American Beaches from Jim Crow to the Sunbelt South

Andrew W. Kahrl

Add to Cart

Book Details

HARDCOVER

$39.95 • £29.95 • €36.00

ISBN 9780674050471

Publication: April 2012

x Text

376 pages

6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches

25 halftones, 14 maps

World

Related Subjects

  • HISTORY: United States: 20th Century
  • HISTORY: Social History
  • HISTORY: United States: State & Local: South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)

Share This

    • About This Book
    • About the Authors
    • Reviews
    • Table of Contents

    Andrew W. Kahrl is Assistant Professor of History at Marquette University.

    Related Links

    • In the New York Times, read Andrew W. Kahrl’s thoughts on the proposed National Open Beaches Act
    • In the Washington Post, learn the history of Highland Beach, a historically African-American beach on the Chesapeake Bay that was established in 1893 by the son of Frederick Douglass
    • Read a local take on the history of African American beachfront property in the Annapolis, Maryland Capital Gazette
    • On the HUP Blog, read Kahrl’s take on the deeply entwined historical forces that led to both the tragic death of African American teenager Trayvon Martin and to the steady resegregation and privatization of America’s leisure spaces
    • Read a piece by Kahrl at the History News Network on the complex history of private beaches
    Permalink
    Find at a Bookstore [+/-]
    • Seminary Co-op »
    • Powell’s »
    • IndieBound »
    • Barnes & Noble »
    • Amazon »
    • More Bookstores…
    Find at a Library » Cite This Book »

    Also Available As

    Jacket: The Land Was Ours

    EBOOK | $39.95

    ISBN 9780674065239

    Awards

    • 2013 Liberty Legacy Foundation Award, Organization of American Historians
    Advertisement for Slow Reading in a Hurried Age, by David Mikics, from Harvard University Press

    Recent News

    • At the NYT Opinionator, Stanley Fish explored Ronald Dworkin’s “religious atheism” and what Religion without God can bring to current discussions about ethics.
    • On the 100th anniversary of his birth, Smithsonian Magazine explored the legacy of Albert Camus—author of Algerian Chronicles—in the country of his birth.
    • Minnesota Public Radio’s The Daily Circuit chose Robert Morrison’s annotated edition of Jane Austen’s classic Persuasion as their Book Pick of the Week.
    • Christopher McKnight Nichols, author of Promise and Peril: America at the Dawn of a Global Age, spoke with the Christian Science Monitor about America’s new isolationism.

    Stay Posted

    Cover of current seasonal catalogNow Available: Browse our interactive Autumn/Winter 2013 catalog.

    In this year of HUP’s centennial, read more about our history in Harvard Magazine, the Harvard Gazette, and Publishers Weekly.

    Find new editions of classic works from the Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library, I Tatti Renaissance Library, and Loeb Classical Library®.

    Booksellers and Librarians: Our new titles are also available via Edelweiss. [ Autumn 2012 | Spring 2013 | Autumn 2013]

    Sample screenshot from a videoOff the Page: Visit our multimedia page for video and audio interviews with HUP authors.

    Join Our Mailing List: Subscribe to receive information about forthcoming books, seasonal catalogs, and more, in newsletters tailored to your interests.

    Blog

    Crossing the Bay of Bengal
    October 1: Excavating the Bay of Bengal
    The historian Daniel Richter’s Before the Revolution is a centuries-deep excavation of the multiple pasts of the land that became the United States. “Excavation” is Richter’s own term, a metaphor that guides the book and offers a fruitful way of imagining the lineage of a land. “The American Revolution,” he explains, “submerged earlier strata of society, culture, and politics, but those ancient worlds remain beneath the surface to mold the nation’s current contours.” He describes these remaining traces, these temporal palimpsests, as “layered pasts,” the new always a product of the old, which itself must be understood in order to fully know the present. In hi…

    About & Contact | Awards | Browse | Catalogs | Conference Exhibits | eBooks | Exam Copies | News | Order | Rights | Permissions | Search | Shopping Cart

    Resources for: Authors | Booksellers & Librarians | Educators | Journalists | Readers

    Harvard University Press offices are located at 79 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA & Vernon House, 23 Sicilian Avenue, London WC1A 2QS UK

    © 2013 President and Fellows of Harvard College | Read our Privacy Policy