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John Francis Ficara spent four years photographing
black farmers across America, witnessing firsthand the difficulties faced by
families
who simply want to continue living and working on their land. Black
Farmers in America reproduces in duotone
over a hundred of Ficara’s
exquisite photographs that capture the labor and joy of daily life
on the family farm. In these poignant images of financial hardship,
survival, and the people’s bond to the soil, Black Farmers
in America documents for posterity the struggle of black farmers
in America at the end of the twentieth century to preserve their
heritage.
In 1920 black Americans made up 14 percent of all the farmers in
the nation and worked 16 million acres of land. Today, battling the
onslaught
of globalization, changing technology, an aging workforce, racist lending
policies, and even the U.S. Department of Agriculture, black farmers
account for less than 1 percent of the nation's farmers and cultivate
fewer than 3 million acres of farmland. Inside these statistics is
a staggering story of human loss: when each farm closed, those farmers,
their spouses, children, grandchildren, and the people they hired,
all had to leave a way of life that had existed in their families for
generations.
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144 PAGES, 10 1/2 X 11 1/4
110 DUOTONE PHOTOGRAPHS
0-8131-2399-2
ISBN-13: 978-0-8131-2399-8
$49.95 CLOTH
Purchase online from University Press of
Kentucky
Purchase
online from Amazon  |
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