TOC - 69002 (copy)

69002
TOC

Contents

Introduction: How Did Fast Food Become Black?

Part I. White Utopias

1. A Fortress of Whiteness: First-Generation Fast Food in the Early Twentieth Century

2. Inharmonious Food Groups: Burger Chateaux, Chicken Shacks, and Urban Renewal’s Attack on the Existential Threat of Blackness

3. Suburbs and Sundown Towns: The Rise of Second-Generation Fast Food

4. Freedom from Panic: American Myth and the Untenability of Black Space

5. Delinquents, Disorder, and Death: Racial Violence and Fast Food’s Growing Disrepute at Midcentury

Part II. Racial Turnover

6. How Does It Feel to Be a Problem? (Mis)Managing Racial Change and the Advent of Black Operators

7. To Banish, Boycott, or Bash? Moderates and Militants Clash in Cleveland

8. Government Burgers: Federal Financing of Fast Food in the Ghetto

9. You’ve Got to Be In: Black Franchisors and Black Economic Power

Part III. Black Catastrophe

10. Blaxploitation: Fast Food Stokes a New Urban Logic

11. PUSH and Pull: Black Advertising and Racial Covenants Fuel Fast Food Growth

12. Ghetto Wars: Fast Food Tussles for Profits amid Sufferation

13. Criminal Chicken: Perceptions of Deviant Black Consumption

14. 365 Black: A Racial Transformation Complete

Conclusion: The Racial Costs

Acknowledgments

Notes

Index