The Negro in the Making of America
Author : Benjamin Quarles
Publisher :
Page : 318 pages
File Size : 45,57 MB
Release : 1968
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Benjamin Quarles
Publisher :
Page : 318 pages
File Size : 45,57 MB
Release : 1968
Category :
ISBN :
Author : W. E. B. Du Bois
Publisher : Open Road Media
Page : 245 pages
File Size : 11,38 MB
Release : 2020-07-28
Category : History
ISBN : 1504064208
A look at African Americans’ contributions to the United States by the iconic leader whose life spanned from the Civil War to the civil rights movement. The first African American to earn a doctorate from Harvard and a cofounder of the NAACP, W. E. B. Du Bois remains a towering figure in US history. In The Gift of Black Folk, he celebrates Black Americans’ struggle for equality—a battle that would continue long after slavery was abolished—and in the ongoing pursuit of a more perfect union. As explorers, laborers, soldiers, artists, slaves, freedmen, and citizens, these individuals played an essential part in the unique conglomerate that is the United States, and their remarkable, often unsung history is conveyed in this classic work.
Author : Jeffrey Aaron Snyder
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 258 pages
File Size : 32,78 MB
Release : 2018-02-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0820351849
In the Jim Crow era, along with black churches, schools, and newspapers, African Americans also had their own history. Making Black History focuses on the engine behind the early black history movement, Carter G. Woodson and his Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH). Author Jeffrey Aaron Snyder shows how the study and celebration of black history became an increasingly important part of African American life over the course of the early to mid-twentieth century. It was the glue that held African Americans together as “a people,” a weapon to fight racism, and a roadmap to a brighter future. Making Black History takes an expansive view of the historical enterprise, covering not just the production of black history but also its circulation, reception, and performance. Woodson, the only professional historian whose parents had been born into slavery, attracted a strong network of devoted members to the ASNLH, including professional and lay historians, teachers, students, “race” leaders, journalists, and artists. They all grappled with a set of interrelated questions: Who and what is “Negro”? What is the relationship of black history to American history? And what are the purposes of history? Tracking the different answers to these questions, Snyder recovers a rich public discourse about black history that took shape in journals, monographs, and textbooks and sprang to life in the pages of the black press, the classrooms of black schools, and annual celebrations of Negro History Week. By lining up the Negro history movement’s trajectory with the wider arc of African American history, Snyder changes our understanding of such signal aspects of twentieth-century black life as segregated schools, the Harlem Renaissance, and the emerging modern civil rights movement.
Author : Anna Pochmara
Publisher : Amsterdam University Press
Page : 281 pages
File Size : 48,26 MB
Release : 2011
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9089643192
The Making of the New Negro examines black masculinity in the period of the New Negro/Harlem Renaissance, which for many decades did not attract a lot of scholarly attention, until, in the 1990s, many scholars discovered how complex, significant, and fascinating it was. Using African American published texts, American archives and unpublished writings, and contemporaneous European discourses, this book focuses both on the canonical figures of the New Negro Movement and African American culture, such as W.E.B. Du Bois, Booker T. Washington, Alain Locke, and Richard Wright, and on writers who have not received as much scholarly attention despite their significance for the movement, such as Wallace Thurman. Its perspective combines gender, sexuality, and race studies with a thorough literary analysis and historicist investigation, an approach that has not been extensively applied to analyze the New Negro Renaissance.
Author : Gene Dattel
Publisher : Government Institutes
Page : 433 pages
File Size : 37,39 MB
Release : 2009-09-16
Category : History
ISBN : 1442210192
Since the earliest days of colonial America, the relationship between cotton and the African-American experience has been central to the history of the republic. America's most serious social tragedy, slavery and its legacy, spread only where cotton could be grown. Both before and after the Civil War, blacks were assigned to the cotton fields while a pervasive racial animosity and fear of a black migratory invasion caused white Northerners to contain blacks in the South. Gene Dattel's pioneering study explores the historical roots of these most central social issues. In telling detail Mr. Dattel shows why the vastly underappreciated story of cotton is a key to understanding America's rise to economic power. When cotton production exploded to satiate the nineteenth-century textile industry's enormous appetite, it became the first truly complex global business and thereby a major driving force in U.S. territorial expansion and sectional economic integration. It propelled New York City to commercial preeminence and fostered independent trade between Europe and the United States, providing export capital for the new nation to gain its financial "sea legs" in the world economy. Without slave-produced cotton, the South could never have initiated the Civil War, America's bloodiest conflict at home. Mr. Dattel's skillful historical analysis identifies the commercial forces that cotton unleashed and the pervasive nature of racial antipathy it produced. This is a story that has never been told in quite the same way before, related here with the authority of a historian with a profound knowledge of the history of international finance. With 23 black-and-white illustrations.
Author : Benjamin Quarles
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Page : 420 pages
File Size : 28,34 MB
Release : 1996-02-05
Category : History
ISBN : 0684818884
Quarles's groundbreaking work not only surveys the role of black Americans as they engaged in the dual, simultaneous processes of assimilating into and transforming the culture of their country, but also, in a portrait of the white response to blacks, holds a mirror up to the deeper moral complexion of our nation's history.
Author : Bryan Fulks
Publisher :
Page : 360 pages
File Size : 47,2 MB
Release : 1970
Category : History
ISBN :
Traces the history of black people in America from the arrival of the first slave ships to the civil rights movements of the 1960's.
Author : Beth Tompkins Bates
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 361 pages
File Size : 33,92 MB
Release : 2012
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0807835641
In the 1920s, Henry Ford hired thousands of African American men for his open-shop system of auto manufacturing. This move was a rejection of the notion that better jobs were for white men only. In The Making of Black Detroit in the Age of Henry Ford
Author : Lerone Bennett (Jr.)
Publisher : Johnson Publishing Company (IL)
Page : 374 pages
File Size : 20,12 MB
Release : 1975
Category : History
ISBN : 9780874850710
A developmental history of the African-American struggle for autonomy and power discusses black slaves and white indentured servants, the black founding fathers, the relationship between African-Americans and native Americans, and other issues.
Author : Benjamin Quarles
Publisher :
Page : 231 pages
File Size : 38,65 MB
Release : 1961
Category : African Americans
ISBN : 9780807840030