An award-winning historian's sweeping new interpretation of the
African American experience.
In this masterful account, Ira Berlin, one of the nation's most
distinguished historians, offers a revolutionary-and sure to be
controversial-new view of African American history. In The Making of
African America, Berlin challenges the traditional presentation of a
linear, progressive history from slavery to freedom. Instead, he puts
forth the idea that four great migrations, between the seventeenth and
twenty-first centuries, lie at the heart of black American culture and
its development. With an engrossing, accessible narrative, Berlin traces
the transit from Africa to America, Virginia to Alabama, Biloxi to
Chicago, Lagos to the Bronx, and in the process finds the essence of
black American life.