African Americans + History -- 1877-1964
Label
African Americans + History -- 1877-1964
Name
African Americans + History
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Incoming Resources
- The new woman of color, the collected writings of Fannie Barrier Williams, 1893-1918, edited with an introduction by Mary Jo Deegan
- Harlem Renaissance, Kelly King Howes ; Christine Slovey, editor
- The African American experience during World War II, Neil A. Wynn
- 100 years of Negro freedom
- A dream deferred, the Jim Crow era, Anne Wallace Sharp
- Wandering in strange lands, a daughter of the Great Migration reclaims her roots, Morgan Jerkins
- Black radical, the life and times of William Monroe Trotter, Kerri K. Greenidge
- The rise of the Jim Crow era, edited by Maria Hussey
- The community builders, 1877-1895, from the end of reconstruction to the Atlanta compromise, Pierre Hauser
- The turning tide, 1948-1956, Margaret Dornfeld
- "We return fighting", the civil rights movement in the jazz age, Mark Robert Schneider
- Ida B. Wells, a passion for justice, William Greaves Productions, Inc. for the American Experience ; writer, William Greaves ; producers, William Greaves, Louise Archambault
- Stony the road, Reconstruction, white supremacy, and the rise of Jim Crow, Henry Louis Gates, Jr
- The art of the possible, Booker T. Washington and Black leadership in the United States, 1881-1925, Kevern Verney
- The peaceable revolution, by Betty Schechter
- The journey to the promised land, the African American struggle for development since the Civil War, Dickson A. Mungazi ; foreword by Dione Brooks Taylor
- Fly away, the great African American cultural migrations, Peter M. Rutkoff and William B. Scott
- South Carolina Negroes, 1877-1900, George Brown Tindall ; with a new introduction by the author
- White violence and Black response, from Reconstruction to Montgomery, Herbert Shapiro
- A. Philip Randolph, pioneer of the civil rights movement, Paula F. Pfeffer
- Black radical, the life and times of William Monroe Trotter, Kerri K. Greenidge
- W.E.B. Du Bois, a biography, David Levering Lewis
- We ain't what we ought to be, the Black freedom struggle from emancipation to Obama, Stephen Tuck
- A new deal for Blacks, the emergence of civil rights as a national issue, Harvard Sitkoff
- The quest for equality, from Civil War to civil rights, by Charles H. Wesley
- We shall not be moved, the passage from the Great Migration to the Million Man March, Velma Maia Thomas
- They left great marks on me, African American testimonies of racial violence from emancipation to World War I, Kidada E. Williams
- The betrayal of the Negro, from Rutherford B. Hayes to Woodrow Wilson, Rayford W. Logan ; new introduction by Eric Foner
- The house I live in, race in the American century, Robert J. Norrell
- Anyplace but here, Arna Bontemps and Jack Conroy
- Daughter of the revolution, the major nonfiction works of Pauline E. Hopkins, edited and with an introduction by Ira Dworkin
- The black vanguard, origins of the Negro social revolution, 1900-1960, [by] Robert H. Brisbane
- To ask for an equal chance, African Americans in the Great Depression, Cheryl Lynn Greenberg
- Who speaks for the Negro?, Robert Penn Warren, with an introduction by David W. Blight
- Enterprising southerners, Black economic success in North Carolina, 1865-1915, Robert C. Kenzer
- Black women in American history, the twentieth century, edited with a preface by Darlene Clark Hine
- Exodusters, Black migration to Kansas after Reconstruction, Nell Irvin Painter ; with a new introduction by the author
- The Kennedy years and the Negro, a photographic record, Edited by Doris E. Saunders. Introd. by Andrew T. Hatcher. Designed by Herbert Temple
- Strategies for freedom, the changing patterns of Black protest, by Bayard Rustin
- Wandering in strange lands, a daughter of the great migration reclaims her roots /, Morgan Jerkins
- The path to equality, 1931-1947, Darlene Clark Hine
- The red record, Ida B. Wells ; [preface, Frederick Douglass]
- The great migration and the Harlem Renaissance, edited by Sabina G. Arora
- The path to equality, from the Scottsboro case to the breaking of baseball's color barrier, (1931-1947), Darlene Clark Hine
- We return fighting, World War I and the shaping of modern Black identity, National Museum of African American History and Culture ; edited by Kinshasha Holman Conwill ; foreword, Philippe Etienne ; introduction by Lonnie G. Bunch III ; contributions by Lisa M, Budreau, Brittney Cooper, John H. Morrow Jr., Krewasky A. Salter, Chad Williams, Jay Winter, and Curtis Young
- Peace be still, modern black America from World War II to Barack Obama, Matthew C. Whitaker
- Stony the road, Reconstruction, white supremacy, and the rise of Jim Crow, Henry Louis Gates, Jr
- Lunch at the 5 & 10, Miles Wolff ; introduction by August Meier
- The original Black elite, Daniel Murray and the story of a forgotten era, Elizabeth Dowling Taylor
- Marching toward freedom, 1957-1965, Robert Weisbrot
Outgoing Resources
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