Catching Sense: African American Communities on a South Carolina Sea Island

Hear it
By Patricia Guthrie
Publisher Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated - (Bergin Garvey)
Catching Sense: African American Communities on a South Carolina Sea Island
Preview: Hear it

Plantation membership, an important association that continues to carry meaning in todays AfricanAmerican communities on the Sea Islands, depends on ones residence between the ages of two and 12. This is the time when one catches sense, or learns the difference between right and wrong and the meaning of social relationships. Plantation membership confers rights and duties to its members for life, particularly in the areas of dispute settlement, adjudication, and status confirmation. The praise house system, which was the focal point of plantation life, is analyzed historically and in terms of the ethnographic present. Guthrie, an AfricanAmerican anthropologist, believes that much of what she witnessed on St. Helena during her field research was a response to the experience of slavery when identity was derived from plantation residency rather than from mother, father, or place of birth.

Read full description [+]
27520 words27,520 words
160 pages160 pages
Lexile 1220LLexile 1220L
Published 1996Published 1996
View ALL Vocabulary Lessons

Book ISBN:

9780897894258

Sample Book Reading logs and activities:
Graphic Organizers - Catching Sense: African American Communities on a South Carolina Sea Island

YEAH. Try it FREE!

Gitf box

Try our 14-day Free Trial to test drive
the booktaco program.

Sign up for a 14-Day Free Trial Not now, thank you
View all games!
Back to main site