In the early decades of the twentieth century, tens of thousands of
African Americans arrived at Detroit's Michigan Central Station,
part of the Great Migration of blacks who left the South seeking
improved economic and political conditions in the urban North. The
most visible of these migrants have been the male industrial
workers who labored on the city's automobile assembly lines.
African American women have largely been absent from traditional
narratives of the Great Migration because they were excluded from
industrial work. By placing these women at the center of her study,
Victoria Wolcott reveals their vital role in shaping life in
interwar Detroit.
Wolcott takes us into the speakeasies, settlement houses, blues
clubs, storefront churches, employment bureaus, and training
centers of Prohibition- and depression-era Detroit. There, she
explores the wide range of black women's experiences, focusing
particularly on the interactions between working- and middle-class
women. As Detroit's black population grew exponentially, women not
only served as models of bourgeois respectability, but also began
to reshape traditional standards of deportment in response to the
new realities of their lives. In so doing, Wolcott says, they
helped transform black politics and culture. Eventually, as the
depression arrived, female respectability as a central symbol of
reform was supplanted by a more strident working-class
activism.