{"id":11020,"date":"2017-12-12t14:00:45","date_gmt":"2017-12-12t22:00:45","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/?p=11020"},"modified":"2017-12-09t22:18:04","modified_gmt":"2017-12-10t06:18:04","slug":"jim-crow-laws-apush-topics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.catharsisit.com\/hs\/ap\/jim-crow-laws-apush-topics\/","title":{"rendered":"jim crow laws: apush topics to study for test day"},"content":{"rendered":"
jim crow laws were the defining political, social, and economic policy throughout the first half of the 20th century. as such, these laws and policies are going to be super important for the apush exam. keep reading to get an understanding of what these laws meant, the degree to which they were enforced, and how the laws were resisted. <\/p>\n
jim crow wasn\u2019t an actual person, but an understanding of who he was will help you make sense of the laws his name inspired. <\/p>\n
during the antebellum period of the united states, minstrel shows were extremely popular. white actors in blackface would perform as exaggerated stereotypes of black people for entertainment\u2019s sake. thomas rice was a famous minstrel performer; among his most popular acts was titled \u201cjump jim crow\u201d. in the mid-1830s, jim crow became synonymous with black people broadly, but still in that caricatured form. with this in mind, it may be easier for you to remember the goal of jim crow laws: to make black americans feel inferior, to represent these individuals as less than human, and, most importantly, to keep the vestiges of slavery\u2019s social order intact. <\/p>\n
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