Cover image for Amaza Lee Meredith imagines herself modern : architecture and the Black American middle class
Amaza Lee Meredith imagines herself modern : architecture and the Black American middle class
Title:
Amaza Lee Meredith imagines herself modern : architecture and the Black American middle class
Author:
Taylor, Jacqueline (Architectural historian), author.
ISBN:
9780262048347
Physical Description:
285 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, plans, facsimiles ; 25 cm
General Note:
Source of cataloging data: WCP
Abstract:
"This book presents the story of Amaza Lee Meredith (1895-1984), a little-known black woman architect, artist and educator born into the Jim Crow South. Her life and work bridge national boundaries to disrupt our understandings of the Great Migration, expand the reach of the well-documented Harlem Renaissance, and reveal the importance of architecture as a force in New Negro identity and Black middle-class self and group formation"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Building -- Biography -- Modernizing Black education and employment opportunities -- Modern aesthetic theories, Africa and the new negro woman -- Utopian visions.