Zandria Robinson was on the hunt to answer this question. She interviewed black southerners to get their take on what it truly means to be black and live in the south. She was about to analyze the northerners take on black identity in America today. In chapter one, Robison looks at Memphis as a whole and lays everything out to see what she is working with. She uses movies, rap artists, singers, writers, academics, etc. to show all of these things are representing the Black South. In chapter two, Cameron D. Lippard says that Robinson “sets up one of [her] more important theoretical themes of explaining black identity in the South that she identifies as ‘country cosmopolitanism’ in the American south” (Lippard). This chapter is where most of her respondents explain to her about the south really is and isn’t about. Chapter three is about how black southerners experience race and interact with whites, even though there is has been legalization on race discrimination. Chapter four
Zandria Robinson was on the hunt to answer this question. She interviewed black southerners to get their take on what it truly means to be black and live in the south. She was about to analyze the northerners take on black identity in America today. In chapter one, Robison looks at Memphis as a whole and lays everything out to see what she is working with. She uses movies, rap artists, singers, writers, academics, etc. to show all of these things are representing the Black South. In chapter two, Cameron D. Lippard says that Robinson “sets up one of [her] more important theoretical themes of explaining black identity in the South that she identifies as ‘country cosmopolitanism’ in the American south” (Lippard). This chapter is where most of her respondents explain to her about the south really is and isn’t about. Chapter three is about how black southerners experience race and interact with whites, even though there is has been legalization on race discrimination. Chapter four