From Plantation to GhettoMacmillan, 1976 - 406 psl. This pioneering work in African American history begins with the earliest experiences of blacks in the United States and offers an in-depth account of slavery, post-Civil War urban life, the place of religion in African American life, political activism, and the changing occupational and economic status of blacks. |
Turinys
The West African Heritage and AfroAmerican History | 3 |
Slavery and the Plantation | 27 |
CHAPTER III | 87 |
CHAPTER IV | 153 |
struction | 172 |
CHAPTER V | 194 |
CHAPTER VI | 232 |
CHAPTER VII | 271 |
CHAPTER VIII | 314 |
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY | 359 |
389 | |
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
abolitionists achieved Alabama American Anti-Slavery Society antebellum Anti-Slavery Society antislavery areas Atlanta Baptist became black community black leaders Black Muslims black political black power black protest black vote black workers Boston century Chicago churches cities Civil civil-rights colonies Colored convention cotton culture Democratic desegregation developed direct action discrimination disfranchisement early economic elected emancipation established federal Frederick Douglass free blacks free Negroes freedmen freedom ghetto History ideology important industrial institutions James Forten James Weldon Johnson labor later leadership Louisiana major masters ment militant Mississippi movement NAACP nationalist North Northern number of black organizations Orleans Party percent Philadelphia plantations planters policies population Populists President racial Reconstruction Republican Revolution role schools segregation sharecropping slave trade slavery SNCC social South Carolina Southern Supreme Court tion unions United Urban League violence Virginia W. E. B. Du Bois Washington white abolitionists World York