Don Barger

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Civil authorities often sought to regulate, obstruct, or even shut down these operations. In the twentieth century, urban and town governments imposed specific licensing requirements for eating places. Such regulations reflected the importance that white authorities attributed to food, the Progressive concern for health and approval of government regulation, and white southern anxiety over the purity of the white body.
To Live and Dine in Dixie: The Evolution of Urban Food Culture in the Jim Crow South (Southern Foodways Alliance Studies in Culture, People, and Place Book 8)
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