Let Nobody Turn Us Around: Voices of Resistance, Reform, and Renewal : an African American AnthologyRowman & Littlefield, 2003 - 674 頁 This anthology of black writers traces the evolution of African-American perspectives throughout American history, from the early years of slavery to the end of the 20th century. The essays, manifestos, interviews, and documents assembled here, contextualized with critical commentaries from Marable and Mullings, introduce the reader to the character and important controversies of each period of black history. The selections represent a broad spectrum of ideology. Conservative, radical, nationalistic, and integrationist approaches can be found in almost every period, yet there have been striking shifts in the evolution of social thought and activism. The editors judiciously illustrate how both continuity and change affected the African-American community in terms of its internal divisions, class structure, migration, social problems, leadership, and protest movements. They also show how gender, spirituality, literature, music, and connections to Africa and the Caribbean played a prominent role in black life and history. To view the companion study guide, please click here http: //www.rowmanlittlefield.com/ISBN/0742527093 |
內容
Resistance Reform and Renewal in the Black Experience | xvii |
FOUNDATIONS SLAVERY AND ABOLITIONISM 17891861 | 1 |
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano Olaudah Equiano 17891 | 7 |
Thus both Ethiopia Stretch Forth Her Hand from Slavery to Freedom and Equality Prince Hall 1797 | 16 |
The Founding of the African Methodist Episcopal Church Richard Allen 1816 | 18 |
David Walkers Appeal 18291830 | 23 |
The Statement of Nat Turner 1831 | 35 |
Slaves Are Prohibited to Read and Write by Law | 41 |
Adam Clayton Powell Jr and the Fight for Black Employment in Harlem | 323 |
Black Women Workers during the Great Depression | 325 |
Southern Negro Youth Conference 1939 | 331 |
A Philip Randolph and the Negro March on Washington Movement 1941 | 333 |
Charles Hamilton Houston and the War Effort among African Americans 1944 | 339 |
An End to the Neglect of the Problems of the Negro Woman Claudia Jones 1949 | 340 |
The Negro Artist Looks Ahead Paul Robeson 1951 | 351 |
Thurgood Marshall The Brown Decision and the Struggle for School Desegregation | 356 |
What If I Am a Woman? Maria W Stewart 1833 | 42 |
A Slave Denied the Rights to Marry Letter of Milo Thompson Slave 1834 | 48 |
The Selling of Slaves Advertisement 1835 | 49 |
Solomon Northrup Describes a New Orleans Slave Auction 1841 | 50 |
Cinque and the Amistad Revolt 1841 | 52 |
Let Your Motto Be Resistance Henry Highland Garnet 1843 | 58 |
Slavery as It Is William Wells Brown 1847 | 64 |
Aint I a Woman? Sojourner Truth 1851 | 67 |
A Black Nationalist Manifesto Martin R Delany 1852 | 69 |
What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? Frederick Douglass 1852 | 87 |
No Rights That a White Man Is Bound to Respect The Dred Scott Case and Its Aftermath | 91 |
Whenever the Colored Man Is Elevated It Will Be by His Own Exertions John S Rock 1858 | 110 |
The Spirituals Go Down Moses and Didnt My Lord Deliver Daniel | 114 |
RECONSTRUCTION AND REACTION THE AFTERMATH OF SLAVERY AND THE DAWN OF SEGREGATION 18611915 | 117 |
What the Black Man Wants Frederick Douglass 1865 | 125 |
Henry McNeal Turner Black Christian Nationalist | 131 |
Black Urban Workers during Reconstruction | 134 |
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Pioneering Black Feminist | 138 |
Labor and Capital Are in Deadly Conflict T Thomas Fortune 1886 | 143 |
Edward Wilmot Blyden and the African Diaspora | 146 |
The Democratic Idea Is Humanity Alexander Crummell 1888 | 157 |
A Voice from the South Anna Julia Cooper 1892 | 167 |
The National Association of Colored Women Mary Church Terrell and Josephine St Pierre Ruffin | 173 |
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings Paul Laurence Dunbar | 178 |
Booker T Washington and the Politics of Accommodation | 181 |
William Monroe Trotter and the Boston Guardian | 198 |
Race and the Southern Worker | 201 |
Ida B WellsBarnett Crusader for Justice | 209 |
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois | 212 |
The Niagara Movement 1905 | 227 |
Hubert Henry Harrison Black Revolutionary Nationalist | 230 |
FROM PLANTATION TO GHETTO THE GREAT MIGRATION HARLEM RENAISSANCE AND WORLD WAR 19151954 | 235 |
Black Conflict over World War I | 242 |
If We Must Die Claude McKay 1919 | 245 |
Black Bolsheviks Cyril V Briggs and Claude McKay | 246 |
Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association | 259 |
Women as Leaders Amy Euphemia Jacques Garvey 1925 | 274 |
Langston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance | 276 |
The Negro Woman and the Ballot Alice Moore DunbarNelson 1927 | 287 |
James Weldon Johnson and Harlem in the 1920s | 290 |
Block Workers in the Great Depression | 295 |
The Scottsboro Trials Mils | 302 |
You Cannot Kill the Working Class Angela Herndon 1933 | 303 |
Hosea Hudson Black Communist Activist | 313 |
Breaking the Bars to Brotherhood Mary Mdeod Bethune 1935 | 320 |
WE SHALL OVERCOME THE SECOND RECONSTRUCTION 19541975 | 365 |
Rosa Parks Jo Ann Robinson and the Montgomery Bus Boycott 19551956 | 376 |
Roy Wilkins and the NAACP | 386 |
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference 1957 | 391 |
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Sitin Movement 1960 | 395 |
Freedom Songs 1960s | 396 |
We Need GroupCentered Leadership Ella Baker | 398 |
Martin Luther King Jr and Nonviolence | 400 |
The Revolution Is at Hand John R Lewis 1963 | 407 |
The Salvation of American Negroes Lies in Socialism W E B Du Bois | 409 |
The Special Plight and the Role of Black Women Fannie Lou Homer | 419 |
SNCC Position Paper Women in the Movement 1964 | 422 |
Elijah Muhammad and the Nation of Islam | 425 |
Malcolm X and Revolutionary Black Nationalism | 427 |
Black Power | 442 |
CORE Endorses Black Power Floyd McKissick 1967 | 458 |
To Atone for Our Sins and Errors in Vietnam Martin Luther King Jr 1967 | 461 |
Huey P Newton and the Black Panther Party for SelfDefense | 468 |
The People Have to Have the Power Fred Hampton | 479 |
I Am a Revolutionary Black Woman Angela Y Davis 1970 | 482 |
Our Thing Is DRUM The League of Revolutionary Black Workers | 486 |
Attica The Fury of Those Who Are Oppressed 1971 | 489 |
The National Black Political Convention Gary Indiana March 1972 | 491 |
There Is No Revolution Without the People Amiri Baraka 1972 | 496 |
My Sight Is Gone But My Vision Remoins Henry Winston | 503 |
THE FUTURE IN THE PRESENT CONTEMPORARY AFRICANAMERICAN THOUGHT 1975 TO THE PRESENT | 509 |
We Would have to Fight the World Michele Wallace 1975 | 519 |
Combahee River Collective Statement 1977 | 524 |
Women in Prison How We Are Assata Shakur 1978 | 529 |
Its Our Turn Harold Washington 1983 | 535 |
I Am Your Sister Audre Lorde 1984 | 537 |
Shaping Feminist Theory bell hooks 1984 | 544 |
The Movement against Apartheid Jesse Jackson and Randall Robinson | 550 |
The Ghetto Underclass William Julius Wilson 1987 | 557 |
Keep Hope Alive Jesse Jackson 1988 | 567 |
Afrocentricity Molefi Asante 1991 | 577 |
The Anita HillClarence Thomas Controversy 1991 | 588 |
Race Matters Cornel West 1991 | 594 |
Black AntiSemitism Henry Louis Gates Jr 1992 | 601 |
Crime Causes and Cures Jarvis Tyner 1994 | 606 |
Louis Farrakhan The Million Man March 1995 | 615 |
A Voice from Death Row Mumia AbuJamal | 618 |
Let Justice Roll Down Like Waters AfricanAmerican Prisoners in Sing Sing 1998 | 619 |
Black Radical Congress 1998 | 625 |
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