Abstrakt: |
Simultaneously, with these archives at the center of her analytical framework, Jackson highlights that despite institutional practices of active exclusion, African Americans created their own spaces of Black leisure throughout the early twentieth century. Simultaneously, Jackson also highlights how African Americans carved out and created avenues of possibility within practices of resistance, refusal, and communal care. In I Heritage i , I Tourism i , I and i I Race: The Other Side of Leisure i , Antoinette T. Jackson works to "render travel and leisure activities visible through the lens of race" (p. 7). [Extracted from the article] |