Culture and Containment

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"Greater Reconstruction"
19th-century cities
A01=Colin Anderson
African Americans
Author_Colin Anderson
Category=JBCC1
Category=JBSL11
Category=NHK
cultural imagery
Currier and Ives
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forthcoming
geographic mobility
Indian reservation
Jim Crow segregation
landscape
Native Americans
nature
race
Racial segregation
residential segregation
romanticism of the Old South
sheet music
southern pastoral
U.S. popular culture
white Americans
Wild West show

Product details

  • ISBN 9781469698113
  • Dimensions: 25 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Movement—who moves, where they move, and how they move—has long been perceived as a racial threat in the United States. To better understand why, Colin Anderson examines how popular culture played a central role in shaping these perceptions during the transformative period of Greater Reconstruction (1845–1900). From sheet music and lithographs to plantation reenactments and Wild West shows, white cultural producers depicted Black and Native mobility as destabilizing. These depictions normalized fears of movement and justified the rise of systems designed to confine these communities, such as Jim Crow segregation and Native American reservations. Using a trans-regional framework spanning the North, South, and West, Anderson places these histories side by side, revealing the shared logic of racial spatial control and reframing nineteenth-century US history as a story of nation-building intertwined with segregation and capitalism.

Yet popular culture was a contested space. Black and Native performers, writers, and activists used the same platforms as white creators to assert agency, resist confinement, and challenge dominant narratives of mobility. By illuminating these dynamics, Culture and Containment reshapes our understanding of nineteenth-century race relations while offering vital insight into enduring legacies—from residential segregation to mass incarceration—that continues to define the racial landscape through the twenty-first century.
Colin Anderson is assistant professor of history and law at the University of Tampa.

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