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Health of Black Americans from Post-Reconstruction to Integration, 1871-1960: An Annotated Bibliography of Contemporary Sources

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Health of Black Americans from Post-Reconstruction to Integration, 1871-1960: An Annotated Bibliography of Contemporary Sources

Contributors:

By (Author) Woodrow Jones
By (author) Mitchell Rice

ISBN:

9780313263149

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Greenwood Press

Publication Date:

23rd March 1990

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Population and demography
Social and cultural history
Ethnic studies

Dewey:

016.61308996073

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

256

Description

This comprehensive annotated bibliography, the first of its kind, provides lengthy entries on articles dealing with black health published during three time periods from post reconstruction to 1960. The compilers', Mitchell F. Rice and Woodrow Jones, Jr., introduction reviews the literature that composes the bibliography and discusses trends in the mortality, morbidity, and health care utilization behaviors of blacks from slavery to the mid-20th century. This cogent essay places the social context of black health care into perspective and enhances both linkages to the dominant themes of each period and a fuller understanding of the history of health care inequities in the U.S. A companion volume by the same compilers', Black American Health: An Annotated Bibliography (Greenwood Press, 1987), treats the more recent literature of the 1970s and 1980s. Following the in-depth introduction, the bibliography is divided into three chapters that annotate literature from the post reconstruction to the early 20th century, 1871-1919; from 1920 to 1950; and from 1951-1960. Each entry consists of an item number, author, title and source, date of publication, and page numbers as well as an exceptionally thorough and thoughtful annotation that averages ten lines in length. Subject and author indexes complete the work which will prove invaluable to students, scholars, and researchers in the fields of black history, medicine, and public health.

Reviews

Another in a fine series, this is the second recent bibliography on the health of black Americans by Rice and Jones. Their Black American Health focused on sources published during the 1970s and 1980s. This work, however, covers publications from 1870 to 1960 and includes nearly 600 annotations; the vast majority of items cited are journal articles. Entries are arranged into three time periods: 1871-1919 (post-Reconstruction to the early 20th century), 1920-1950, and 1951-1960, with annotations numbered in sequence. The introduction, which discusses health and working conditions for black Americans from slavery to the mid-20th century, is fairly lengthy and informative. Rice and Jones's two works combine several decades of important literature, thereby making research more convenient and less time consuming. Lenwood G. Davis's bibliography A History of Selected Diseases in the Black Community (1976) is also a listing of retrospective titles on health; however, the work under review is far more comprehensive than Davis's 28-page pamphlet. . . . University-level collections.-Choice
This titles is recommended for both social and medical historians.-College & Research Libraries
This volume lists 592 citations to contemporary sources, primarily from medical or health journals, and should be valuable to researchers in both social and medical history. The framing dates are well explained in the text: little was published on this topic before 1871, because blacks did not leave the plantations (which provided limited health care) in great numbers until after emancipation and reconstruction; post-1960 publications have been listed in a companion volume by the same authors, Black American Health (Greenwood, 1987.) An introductory essay gives an overview on such health-related topics as sanitation, housing, and working conditions. The citations are arranged by date in three main sections: 1871-1919, 1920-1950, and 1951-1960. Within each section, they are listed alphabetically. Author and title indexes are included.-Preview
"This titles is recommended for both social and medical historians."-College & Research Libraries
"This volume lists 592 citations to contemporary sources, primarily from medical or health journals, and should be valuable to researchers in both social and medical history. The framing dates are well explained in the text: little was published on this topic before 1871, because blacks did not leave the plantations (which provided limited health care) in great numbers until after emancipation and reconstruction; post-1960 publications have been listed in a companion volume by the same authors, Black American Health (Greenwood, 1987.) An introductory essay gives an overview on such health-related topics as sanitation, housing, and working conditions. The citations are arranged by date in three main sections: 1871-1919, 1920-1950, and 1951-1960. Within each section, they are listed alphabetically. Author and title indexes are included."-Preview
"Another in a fine series, this is the second recent bibliography on the health of black Americans by Rice and Jones. Their Black American Health focused on sources published during the 1970s and 1980s. This work, however, covers publications from 1870 to 1960 and includes nearly 600 annotations; the vast majority of items cited are journal articles. Entries are arranged into three time periods: 1871-1919 (post-Reconstruction to the early 20th century), 1920-1950, and 1951-1960, with annotations numbered in sequence. The introduction, which discusses health and working conditions for black Americans from slavery to the mid-20th century, is fairly lengthy and informative. Rice and Jones's two works combine several decades of important literature, thereby making research more convenient and less time consuming. Lenwood G. Davis's bibliography A History of Selected Diseases in the Black Community (1976) is also a listing of retrospective titles on health; however, the work under review is far more comprehensive than Davis's 28-page pamphlet. . . . University-level collections."-Choice

Author Bio

MITCHELL F. RICE is Professor of Public Administration and Political Science at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge. He has written extensively on black and minority health issues and is coeditor of Health Care Issues in Black America (Greenwood Press, 1987) and Contemporary Public Policy Perspectives and Black Americans (Greenwood Press, 1984) and co-compiler of Black American Health: An Annotated Bibliography (Greenwood Press, 1987). WOODROW JONES JR. is Professor of Political Science and Associate Dean at Texas A & M University. His writings on the topics of black health have appeared in numerous periodicals, and he is the coeditor and co-compiler with Mitchell F. Rice, of Contemporary Public Policy Perspectives and Black Americans, Health Care Issues in Black America, and Black American Health: An Annotated Bibliography (Greenwood Press, 1987).

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