Coquitlam Public Library

Goin' to Chicago

Label
Goin' to Chicago
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Main title
Goin' to Chicago
Oclc number
908378096
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Originally produced by California Newsreel in 1994
Runtime
69
Summary
The migration of African Americans from the rural South to the cities of the North and West during and after World War II is retold through personal stories of a group of Chicagoans born in the Mississippi Delta. Goin' to Chicago chronicles one of the most momentous yet least heralded sagas of American history - the great migration of African Americans from the rural South to the cities of the North and West after World War II. Four million black people created a dynamic urban culture outside the South, changing America forever. Goin' to Chicago traces this history through the personal stories of a group of older Chicagoans born mostly in the Mississippi Delta. They share their bitter recollections of sharecropping - owing half of each crop to the landowner, each beginning back-breaking labor in the fields at ten. A steelworker, newspaper editor, blues musician and others movingly recall their journeys up Hwy. 61 to Chicago in search of comparatively well-paying factory jobs. On the South Side they built a vibrant city-within-a-city of thriving black businesses and civic institutions, proudly referred to as "Bronzeville." They recall that after World War II increasingly self-assertive and prosperous blacks led a bitterly resisted struggle to open up fair housing opportunities outside the ghetto. But just as the American Dream was coming into reach for some, the steel mills and stockyards closed, leaving newer immigrants trapped in decaying public housing projects and inner-city despair. Goin' to Chicago is a moving tribute to a generation of African Americans who struggled - and triumphed - over odds as great or greater than other immigrant groups. "Goin' to Chicago is a saga...It glows with insight, humor in adversity and hope. It's a beaut!" - Studs Terkel. "Adds tremendously to our understanding of one of the largest human migrations...A compelling story all Americans should see." - Earl Lewis, Provost, Emory University. "Powerful and evocative...The triumphs and tribulations of an entire generation are encapsulated in this film." - Jacqueline Jones, Brandeis University
Technique
live action
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