Listen "The Great Migration and Black Foodways"
Episode Synopsis
To understand African American foodways, we must first understand The Great Migration. From the 1910’s to the 1970’s, over six million African Americans moved from the rural South to the urban North in one of the largest mass movements of people in American History. On this episode, we hear from history professor Dr Frederick Douglas Opie, and culinary historian Adrian Miller, about how this critical phenomenon not only affected African Americans economically and socially, but also brought the spread of Southern food across the country, influencing regional cuisines for years to come.Setting the Table is part of Whetstone Radio Collective. Learn more about Setting the Table here.Find show notes here.
More episodes of the podcast Setting the Table
Black Women in Activism and Food
03/05/2022
Barbeque Legacies in Los Angeles
26/04/2022
Virginia: The Birthplace of Barbeque
19/04/2022
The Future of Black Food
12/04/2022
The Complicated Stories of Soul Food
05/04/2022
Let's Talk about Black Brewing & Distilling
29/03/2022
The Resurgence of Black Farming
22/03/2022
What happened to Black farmers?
15/03/2022
Trailer - Setting the Table
28/02/2022
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.