Let Nobody Turn Us Around: Voices of Resistance, Reform, and Renewal. An African American Anthology
2002; Southern Historical Association; Volume: 68; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/3069942
ISSN2325-6893
AutoresCharles Pete Banner-Haley, Manning Marable, Leith Mullings,
Tópico(s)Race, History, and American Society
ResumoPart 1 Foundations - slavery and abolitionism: the interesting nature of the life of Olaudah Equiano, 1789 the founding of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Richard Allen David Walker's appeal, 1829-1830 the statement of Nat Turner, 1831 slaves are prohibited to read and write by law, 1831 what if I am a woman?, 1833, Maria W. Stewart a slave denied the right to marry, 1834 Solomon Northrup describes a New Orleans slave auction, 1841 let your motto be resistance!, 1843, Henry Highland Garnet arOnt I a woman?, 1851, Sojourner Truth Frederick Douglass - what to the slave is the Fourth of July, 1852 the spirituals - go down Moses and didn't my Lord deliver Daniel. Part 2 Reconstruction and reaction - the aftermath of slavery and the dawn of segregration, 1861-1915: Frederick Douglass - what the black man wants, 1865 black urban workers during reconstruction pioneering black feminist, Frances Ellen Watkins Edward Wilmot Blyden and African diaspora the national association of coloured women - Mary Church Terell and Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin Paul Laurence Dunbar - I don't know why the caged bird sings Booker T. Washington and the politics of accommodation crusader for justice, Ida B. Wells-Barnett The Niagra movement, 1905, William Edward Burdghardt Du Bois The Brownsville affair, 1907. Part 3 From plantation to ghetto - the great migration, Harlem renaissance and world war, 1915-1954: black conflict over World War I black bolsheviks -Cyril V. Briggs and Claude McKay Langston Hughes and the Harlem renaissance the negro woman and the ballot, 1927, Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson Harlem in the 1920s, James Weldon Johnson black workers in the Great Depression the Scottsboro trials, 1930 Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. and the fight for black employment in Harlem black women workers during the Great Depression southern negro youth conference, 1939 A. Philip Randolph and the negro march on Washington movement, 1941 Paul Robeson - the negro artist looks ahead the Brown decision and the struggle for school desegregation, Thurgood Marshall.
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