1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910797574503321

Autore

Trotter Otis <1954->

Titolo

Keeping heart : a memoir of family struggle, race, and medicine / / Otis Trotter ; introduction by Joe William Trotter Jr

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Athens, Ohio : , : Ohio University Press, , 2015

©2015

ISBN

0-8214-4544-8

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (238 p.)

Collana

Series in Race, Ethnicity, and Gender in Appalachia

Classificazione

SOC001000SOC026000SOC053000

Disciplina

305.896/073092

Soggetti

African Americans

African American families

Heart - Diseases - Patients - United States

African Americans - Migrations - History - 20th century

Migration, Internal - United States - History - 20th century

West Virginia Biography

Ohio Biography

Appalachian Region, Southern Biography

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di contenuto

""Acknowledgments""; ""Introduction""; ""1: Memories of Parents and Places""; ""2: Troubled Waters of Vallscreek""; ""3: The Newcomers""; ""4: New Lease on Life""; ""5: Life on the Avenue /Bitter and Sweet""; ""6: Navigating Heart Disease as a Teenager""; ""7: College and Career""; ""8: The Struggle Continues""

Sommario/riassunto

"'After saying our good-byes to friends and neighbors, we all got in the cars and headed up the hill and down the road toward a future in Ohio that we hoped would be brighter,' Otis Trotter writes in Keeping Heart : A Memoir of Family Struggle, Race, and Medicine. Organized around the life histories, medical struggles, and recollections of Trotter and his thirteen siblings, the story begins in 1914 with his parents. By tracing the family's movement northward after the unexpected death of his father, this engaging chronicle illuminates the journeys not only of a black man born with heart disease in the southern Appalachian coalfields, but of his family and community. This testament to the



importance of ordinary lives fills a gap in the literature on an underexamined aspect of American experience: the lives of African Americans in rural Appalachia and in the nonurban endpoints of the Great Migration"--