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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page review of the racial and cultural changes that have unfolded in this representative of the Deep South. The author contends that cultural demarcation between the races has been a consistent element of Charleston’s history. Bibliography lists sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPraceCharleston.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the Deep South presents an excellent perspective on the changes that have occurred there in regard to race, culture, and religion. The demographics of Charleston, South Carolina, for example,
have changed significantly over the last couple of decades. This change is most visible in regard to the racial diversity that now characterizes the city. More subtle, however,
have been the changes that have occurred culturally and religiously. One persistent element in the face of all of that change, however, has been the cultural demarcation between the
races. That demarcation has been a characteristic of Charleston, in fact, since its earliest history. Marger (2000) in "Race and Ethnic Relations:
American And Global Perspectives" notes that many of the problems which confront us today extend back to the original colonization of this country. That could certainly be contended to
be the case in Charleston. Throughout much of its history Charleston has been characterized by a large black population. By 1860 the United States had four million slaves
comprising one-third of the total population of the southernmost states (Sinclaire, 1995). Even prior to the Civil War Charleston had a largely free black population and this population was
accepted as craftsmen and in the retail environment alike. Many blacks in Charleston held jobs as day laborers. Among these individuals as well, however, were slaves and the
slave owners and those who condoned slavery as a long-standing institution of slavery which was considered by many to be an beneficial institution both to the slave and to American
economy (Byrd, 1990). An ever-present ideology was the separation that existed between the cities blacks and whites. Religion too has been a
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