The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom
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''The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom, 1750-1925'' is a book by
Herbert G. Gutman Herbert George Gutman (1928–1985) was an American professor of history at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, where he wrote on slavery and labor history. Early life and education Gutman was born in 1928 to Jewish immigran ...
that addresses the impact of slavery on black families. It is based on research that Gutman conducted over the course of the decade since the Moynihan Report, which revived the "tangle of pathology" thesis; the claim that black families in the US were incapable of functioning in a healthy way, a rationale previously rejected by critics as racist. The book draws on census data, diaries, family records, bills of sale and other records. Gutman says that if slavery destroyed the family as white politician
Daniel Patrick Moynihan Daniel Patrick Moynihan (March 16, 1927 – March 26, 2003) was an American politician, diplomat and sociologist. A member of the Democratic Party, he represented New York in the United States Senate from 1977 until 2001 and served as an ...
claimed, then family structure statistics should have been worse closer to the time of slavery. He then lays out statistics showing that black families actually had higher legitimacy rates than whites for the first several decades after the end of the Civil War, along with comparable success in various other metrics. Gutman concludes that black families, rather than having been irretrievably destroyed by slavery, showed great power and resilience, pulling together as slavery ended, with more two-parent households and couples who stayed together longer.How Slavery Affected African American Families
/ref> He says that black families also remained intact during the first wave of migration to the North after the Civil War (although he remained open to arguments about black family collapse in the 1930s and 1940s).William Serrin, "Prof. Herbert Gutman, Labor Historian, Is Dead," ''New York Times'', July 22, 1985, p. D-9. All the way through 1925, black families grew stronger and more successful, increasing in wealth.


References

category:Sociology books category:American history books 1977 non-fiction books {{ethno-book-stub