Limited Choices : Mable Jones, a Black Children's Nurse in a Northern White Household
ISBN: 9780813946665
Platform/Publisher: Ebook Central / University of Virginia Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Limited; Download: 7 Days at a Time
Subjects: Political Science; History;

When interviewed by the Charlottesville, Virginia, Ridge Street Oral History Project, which documented the lives of Black residents in the 1990s, Mable Jones described herself as a children's nurse, recounting her employment in New York City in the 1940s and 1950s. Emily Abel and Margaret Nelson, whose mother employed Jones, use the interview and their own childhood memories as a starting point in piecing together Jones's life in an effort to investigate the impact of structural racism, and a discriminatory system their family helped uphold. The book is situated in three different settings--the poor rural South, Charlottesville, and the affluent suburb of Larchmont, New York--all places that Mable Jones lived and worked.

Mable Jones was emblematic of her race, gender, time, and place. Like many African Americans born around 1900, she lived first in a rural community before moving to a city. She had to leave school after the eighth grade and worked until a year before her death. And her occupation was that held by the majority of African American women through the twentieth century. Reflecting on her life, local civil rights leader Eugene Williams asked the authors to document the "segregation in Charlottesville that Mrs. Jones endured." This book honors his charge by highlighting the limited choices available to her. It documents the slow progress of change for many African Americans in the South, explores the still little-known experiences of Black household workers in the suburban North, and reconstructs the textured lives that Mable Jones and the many women like her nevertheless carved out in a system that was and continues to be stacked against them.


Emily K. Abel is Professor Emerita and Research Professor at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and author of, among other works, Sick and Tired: A History of Fatigue and Tuberculosis and the Politics of Exclusion: A History of Public Health and Migration to Los Angeles. Margaret K. Nelson is Professor of Sociology Emerita at Middlebury College and author of, among other works, Like Family: Narratives of Fictive Kinship and The Social Economy of Single Motherhood: Raising Children in Rural America.

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