Jump to navigation
THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT LIBRARIES
Digital Collections
Home
About
Search
You are here
Home
›
Collections
›
Kake Walk at UVM
›
Black Image in White Vermont: The Origin, Meaning, and Abolition of Kake Walk
Primary tabs
View
(active tab)
Pages
Loading the Internet Archive BookReader, please wait...
In collections
Kake Walk at UVM
Details
Title
Black Image in White Vermont: The Origin, Meaning, and Abolition of Kake Walk
Author
Loewen, James W.
Subject
African Americans in popular culture.
Alumni and alumnae.
Blackface entertainers.
Cakewalk (Dance).
College students.
College teachers.
Committees.
Greek letter societies.
Minstrel shows.
Race discrimination.
Race relations.
Racism.
Stereotypes (Social psychology).
Whites -- Race identity.
University of Vermont.
Civil rights.
Sexism.
Genre
chapters (layout features)
Format
text
Extent
21 pages
Date Created
1991
Description
At the time of this digital collection launch, this chapter is the only known scholarly piece on UVM's Kake Walk. James Loewen was a professor of sociology at the University of Vermont. This chapter was published in a book commemorating the university's bicentennial: Loewen, James. "Black Image in White Vermont: The Origin, Meaning, and Abolition of Kake Walk." The University of Vermont: The First Two Hundred Years. Sr. ed. Robert V. Daniels. Hanover, NH / University of Vermont : Distributed by University Press of New England / University of Vermont, 1991.
Source Document Location
University of Vermont Libraries. Special Collections.
Shelf Location
University Archives, Record Group 53: Fraternities and Sororities, Series: Kake Walk
Language
English
Note [Digital Version]
2010-05-12, Center for Digital Initiatives, University of Vermont Libraries
Digital Format
Text/Color: 24 bits; 300 ppi
Parent Collections
Kake Walk at UVM
Date Created
1991
Access Conditions
Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.
Bookmark
Bookmarks:
- Select bookmark list -
My Default List