Daniel J. Sharfstein is an associate professor of law at Vanderbilt University. Sharfstein graduated from Yale Law School and from Harvard College, summa cum laude in history and literature and Afro-American Studies. He has been awarded fellowships in legal history from Harvard, New York University, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Sharfstein has written for the Yale Law Journal, The New York Times, The Economist, and The Washington Post.
"The Invisible Line offers a trilogy of remarkable tales
brimming with risk taking, camouflage, irony, narrow escapes,
misgivings, regret, delight, and full-scale human drama. Excellent
histories have been published about the Great Migration of
twentieth-century African Americans from the rural South to the
urban North, but, until now, no authoritative and cumulative work
has looked at this preceding and overlapping social movement of
race changing. This book overthrows nearly everything Americans
thought they knew about race."
-Melissa Fay Greene, author of Praying for Sheetrock and
There Is No Me Without You
"An original and often startling look at the vagaries of the 'color
line.' Sharfstein shows definitively that it was not a doctrinaire
belief in racial purity that gave the South stability but rather a
fluid understanding by its people and its institutions of racial
difference and its multiple permutations."
-Henry Louis Gates Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor,
Harvard University
"Sharfstein brings his original research alive with a novelist's
eye for vivid detail and narrative. A groundbreaking work that will
stir reflection and debate."
-Matthew Pearl, author of The Dante Club
"With lively prose and remarkable research, Sharfstein creates a
fresh and stirring epic of American life. He weaves the vexing
problem of race into the very fabric of national life and shows
just how unsteady and complicated racial identity can be."
-Martha A. Sandweiss, author of Passing Strange
"A tremendous contribution to our understanding of the role of race
in American history . . . One of those rare books that make history
come alive."."
-Lawrence M. Friedman, Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor, Stanford Law
School; author of A History of American Law
"Deeply intertwined in the American story of race are these stories
of camouflaged families and their passages across the color line.
Daniel Sharfstein disentangles them with eloquence and
compassion."
-David K. Shipler, Pulitzer Prize winning author of A Country of
Strangers
"A beautifully written book that reveals not only how the law has
shaped American ideas about race but also how the complexity of
human experience has pushed against the rigid boundaries of our
legal categories."
-Mark S. Weiner, professor of law, Rutgers-Newark School of Law;
author of Black Trials
"Brilliant . . . a true American story. Its consequences pervade
the American past and shadow its future."
-Ira Berlin, professor of history at the University of Maryland,
author of The Making African America
"A must-read for all serious students of the race line in American
life, written with care, verve, sophistication, and enormous
learning."
--Randall Kennedy, Michael R. Klein Professor of Law, Harvard
University
"A powerful indictment of one of America's most enduring myths.
Written with a novelist's eye for fascinating characters and rich
sense of place and a scholar's precision and panoramic perspective,
The Invisible Line makes visible the shifting artificial nature of
the "color line" and its dire, life-changing consequences. Read
this book if you want to understand the roots of our knotted racial
history. Read this book if you hope to untangle it."
--Bliss Broyard, author of One Drop
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