Prompted by the overt omission of Muncie's black community from the
famous community study by Robert S. Lynd and Helen Merrell Lynd,
Middletown: A Study in Modern American Culture, the authors initiated
this project to reveal the unrecorded historical and contemporary life
of Middletown, a well-known pseudonym for the Midwestern city of Muncie,
Indiana. As a collaboration of community and campus, this book recounts
the early efforts of Hurley Goodall to develop a community history and
archive that told the story of the African American community, and
rectify the representation of small town America as exclusively white.
The authors designed and implemented a collaborative ethnographic field
project that involved intensive interviews, research, and writing
between community organizations, local experts, ethnographers, and teams
of college students. This book is a unique model for collaborative
research, easily accessible to students. It will be a valuable resource
for instructors in anthropology, creative writing, sociology, community
research, and African American studies.