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Black Wall Street in Flames The Tulsa Race Massacre and the Cultural Trauma of African Americans
Coles
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Black Wall Street in Flames The Tulsa Race Massacre and the Cultural Trauma of African Americans in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $18.99


By None
Black Wall Street in Flames The Tulsa Race Massacre and the Cultural Trauma of African Americans in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $18.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
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What happens when prosperity becomes a threat-and history is set on fire? In Black Wall Street in Flames, the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 is examined not only as one of the most devastating acts of racial violence in American history, but as a defining moment of collective cultural trauma. Its echoes still shape the African American experience today. Once a symbol of Black excellence, entrepreneurship, and self-determination, Tulsa's Greenwood District-known as Black Wall Street -was reduced to ashes in a coordinated campaign of racial terror. This book goes beyond the facts to uncover the psychological, social, and cultural consequences of that destruction, tracing how silenced history, intergenerational trauma, and systemic injustice continue to influence American society. Through rigorous historical analysis and cultural insight, this work explores:
The rise and destruction of Black Wall Street as a challenge to white supremacy
The role of state and institutional complicity in racial violence
The long-term cultural trauma inflicted on African American communities
The erasure of memory-and the fight to reclaim historical truth
Why Tulsa still matters in today's conversations on race, justice, and reparations
Both scholarly and accessible , Black Wall Street in Flames bridges history, sociology, and cultural studies to offer a deeply human account of loss, resilience, and resistance. This is not just a book about the past.
It is a call to remember, to understand, and to confront the foundations of racial inequality in America. Essential reading for students, educators, historians, and anyone seeking to understand the roots of racial trauma in the United States.
What happens when prosperity becomes a threat-and history is set on fire? In Black Wall Street in Flames, the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 is examined not only as one of the most devastating acts of racial violence in American history, but as a defining moment of collective cultural trauma. Its echoes still shape the African American experience today. Once a symbol of Black excellence, entrepreneurship, and self-determination, Tulsa's Greenwood District-known as Black Wall Street -was reduced to ashes in a coordinated campaign of racial terror. This book goes beyond the facts to uncover the psychological, social, and cultural consequences of that destruction, tracing how silenced history, intergenerational trauma, and systemic injustice continue to influence American society. Through rigorous historical analysis and cultural insight, this work explores:
The rise and destruction of Black Wall Street as a challenge to white supremacy
The role of state and institutional complicity in racial violence
The long-term cultural trauma inflicted on African American communities
The erasure of memory-and the fight to reclaim historical truth
Why Tulsa still matters in today's conversations on race, justice, and reparations
Both scholarly and accessible , Black Wall Street in Flames bridges history, sociology, and cultural studies to offer a deeply human account of loss, resilience, and resistance. This is not just a book about the past.
It is a call to remember, to understand, and to confront the foundations of racial inequality in America. Essential reading for students, educators, historians, and anyone seeking to understand the roots of racial trauma in the United States.

















