Black & African American

Reviewed by: 

It is entirely possible that the vast majority of Americans have never thought of or even considered the possibility that their country and its white supremacist legislation of the 1930s would ever

Reviewed by: 

A Mind to Stay is a revealing history of much of the otherwise lost reality of thousands of plantations that lack documentation.”

Reviewed by: 

a potent cocktail of political anger and radical formal experimentation.”

Reviewed by: 

Written/Unwritten is a collection of essays by American academic faculty of color who have written poignant essays about the challenges, barriers, pain, and resilience required of being a

Reviewed by: 

This is not one Till tale but three. When young Emmett Till was murdered in Money, Mississippi, in 1955, his death changed the Civil Rights Movement and American history.

Reviewed by: 

Local history can be rich, exotic, complicated, personal, and dark but especially when an incident like the Scopes Monkey Trial serves as an “island” in regional and national social currents.

Reviewed by: 

Among historians certainly, it has been axiomatic that control of the authority and power of the Federal government was maintained by the so-called Southern plantation aristocracy for the first 75

Reviewed by: 

The last couple of decades have seen a steady stream of fully documented, honest, readable, and scholarly single works on American slavery.

Reviewed by: 

History as documented through the image has a short historiography. Until recently, even the nobility lacked multiple images or sometimes any likeness at all.

Reviewed by: 

And Still I Rise: Black America Since MLK is a companion to a PBS series of the same name and chronicles the last 50 years of black history and culture in an illustrated timeline featuring

Reviewed by: 

“May we find the courage . . . to make this land . . . a more just, more reasonable, and more tolerant place.”

Reviewed by: 

In 1969 eight talented African American athletes risked their athletic scholarships and likely their NFL careers by demanding an end to institutional racism at Syracuse University.

Author(s):
Reviewed by: 

a funny, entertaining, lightweight highbrow novel . . .

“What’s so good about the truth if it’s more awful than a lie?”

Reviewed by: 

“. . . an invaluable resource for the study of 20th century popular music.”

Reviewed by: 

“Wonderful writing, wonderful thoughts, and in the end an erudite and informed plea for tolerance and humanism.”

Reviewed by: 

“. . . while many of the stories in Life Upon These Shores give us pause, Mr.

Reviewed by: 

“In all, this is a graceful story about a talented woman whose poetry and prose have, for the most part, survived for over 200 years. Mr.

Reviewed by: 

“‘What does matter is that a lot of people died because I killed them, and I lived. That is what I set out to do and that is what I accomplished . . .

Reviewed by: 

“a fascinating, illuminating, engaging story of what it takes to be successful at the highest levels.

Pages