The African-American odyssey:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston [u.a.]
Prentice Hall
2011
|
Ausgabe: | Combined vol., 5. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Getr. Zählung Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780205728817 0205728812 |
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035 | |a (DE-599)BVBBV040725721 | ||
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100 | 1 | |a Hine, Darlene Clark |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a The African-American odyssey |c Darlene Clark Hine ; William C. Hine ; Stanley Harrold |
250 | |a Combined vol., 5. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Boston [u.a.] |b Prentice Hall |c 2011 | |
300 | |a Getr. Zählung |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
650 | 4 | |a Geschichte | |
650 | 4 | |a Schwarze. USA | |
650 | 4 | |a African Americans | |
650 | 4 | |a African Americans |x History | |
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700 | 1 | |a Hine, William C. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
700 | 1 | |a Harrold, Stanley |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
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999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025705849 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804150037685469184 |
---|---|
adam_text | PART I
Becoming African American
2
1
Africa,
ca. 6000
BCE-ca.
16000
CE
4
2
Middle Passage, ca.
1450-1809 30
3
Black People in Colonial North America,
1526-1763 58
4
Rising Expectations: African Americans and the Struggle
for Independence,
1763-1783 86
5
African Americans in the New Nation,
1783-1820 110
PART II
Slavery, Abolition, and the Quest for Freedom: The Coming
of the Civil War,
1*793-1861 138
6
Life in the Cotton Kingdom,
1793-1861 140
7
Free Black People in Antebellum America,
1820-1861 166
8
Opposition to Slavery,
1730-1833 194
Ç^
9
Let Your Motto Be Resistance,
1833-1850 216
( )
10
And Black People Were at the Heart of It,
1846-1861 240
PART III
The Civil War, Emancipation, and Black Reconstruction:
The Second American Revolution
266
11
Liberation: African Americans and the Civil War,
1861-1865 268
12
The Meaning of Freedom: The Promise of Reconstruction,
1865-1868 298
13
The Meaning of Freedom: The Failure of Reconstruction,
1868-1877 324
PART IV
Searching for Safe Spaces
348
14
White Supremacy Triumphant: African Americans in the Late Nineteenth Century,
1877-1895 350
15
African Americans Challenge White Supremacy,
1877-1918 380
16
Conciliation, Agitation, and Migration: African Americans in the Early Twentieth
Century,
1895-1928 412
17
African Americans and the
1920s, 1918-1929 450
PART V
The Great Depression and World War II
476
18
Black Protest, the Great Depression, and the New Deal,
1929-1940 478
19
Meanings of Freedom: Culture and Society in the
1930s, 1940s,
and
1950s, 1930-1950 508
20
The World War II Era and the Seeds of a Revolution,
1936-1948 538
PART VI
The Black Revolution
568
21
The Freedom Movement,
1950-1965 570
22
Black Nationalism, Black Power, Black Arts,
1965-1980 606
23
African Americans at the Millennium,
1980-2010 642
24
The Triumph of Black Politics:
1980
to the Present,
1980-2010 670
Epilogue: A Nation within a Nation
698
vii
4-í
Preface
xxii
part i
Becoming African American
2
Й
О
(1)
Жіса,
ca. 6000
всЕ-са.
1600
ce
4
A Huge and Diverse Land
6
The Birthplace of Humanity
6
Ancient Civilizations and Old Arguments
8
Egyptian Civilization
9
Kush, Meroë,
and Axum
10
West Africa
12
Ancient Ghana
13
ШїШІІйЇІІІ
Al
Bakri
Describes Kumbi Saleh and
Ghana s Royal Court
14
The Empire of Mali,
1230-1468 14
The Empire of Songhai,
1464—1591 15
The West African Forest Region
16
Kongo and Angola
1
g
West African Society and Culture
19
Families and Villages
1
g
АЯі
A Dutch Visitor Describes Benin City
20
PROFILE: Nzinga Mbemba (Affonso I) of Kongo
21
Women
2 2
Class and Slavery
22
Religion
22
Art and Music
23
Literature: Oral Histories, Poetry, and Tales
23
Technology
24
Conclusion
25
Recommended Reading
26
Additional
Bibliography
26
Retracing the Odyssey
27
Review
Questions
27
myhistorylab Connections
27
Roots of Culture
M
The Ancient Manuscripts of Timbuktu
28
3o
J
Wddle Passage, ca.
1450-1809
Vlil
The European Age of Exploration and Colonization
32
The Slave Trade in Africa
33
The Origins of the Atlantic Slave Trade
33
Growth of the Atlantic Slave Trade
36
CONTENTS
ЇХ
The African-American Ordeal from Capture
to Destination
37
The Crossing
39
The Slavers and Their Technology
40
A Slave s Story
41
A Captain s Story
41
P R O F
1
L Ľ
:
Olaudah Equiano
42
Provisions
for the Middle Passage
43
Sanitation, Disease, and Death
44
ШШЕШЅШШ-
The Journal of a Dutch Slaver
45
Resistance and Revolt at Sea
45
Cruelty
46
P R
О
F
I I.
E
:
Ayuba Suleiman
Diaüo of
Bandu
47
ШШШШШЖ
Dysentery (or the Bloody Flux)
48
African Women on Slave Ships
48
Landing and Sale in the West Indies
48
Seasoning
49
The End of die Journey: Masters and Slaves
in the Americas
51
The Ending of die Adantic Slave Trade
5 2
Conclusion
53
Recommended Reading
53
Additional
Bibliography
54
Retracing the Odyssey
54
Review
Questions
54
myhistorylab Connections
55
Visualizing the Past
■4
The Voyage to Slavery
56
Mâck
People in Colonial
North America,
1526-1763
58
The Peoples of Nordi America
6
1
American Indians
61
The Spanish Empire
62
The British and Jamestown
62
Africans Arrive in the Chesapeake
63
Black Servitude in die Chesapeake
63
Race and the Origins of Black Slavery
64
The Emergence of Chattel
Slaven
65
Bacon s Rebellion and American Slavery
65
Plantation Slavery,
1700-1750 66
Tobacco Colonies
66
P R O F
1
L E
: Anthonyjohnson 66
Low-Country Slavery
68
ШЕЕіЕШЕШШ
A Description of an Eighteenth-Century
Virginia Plantation
69
Plantation Technology
70
Slave life in Early America
70
Miscegenation and Creolization
71
The Origins of African-American Culture
7 2
The Great Awakening
73
Language, Music, and Folk Literature
74
The African-American Impact on Colonial Culture
75
■Џ:Ѓ<&}1-.Ф.Ш$;
A Poem by Jupiter Hammon
75
Slavery in the Northern Colonies
76
Slavery in Spanish Florida and French Louisiana
77
African Americans in New Spain s Northern
Borderlands
78
Black Women in Colonial America
79
Black Resistance and Rebellion
80
Conclusion
81
Recommended Reading
81
Additional
Bibliography
82
Retracing the Odyssey
84
Review
Questions
84
myhistorylab Connections
85
Mšing
Expectations: African
Americans and the Struggle for
Independence,
1763-1783 86
The Crisis of die British Empire
88
The Declaration of Independence and African Americans
90
ľ R O
E
!
I.
E
:
Crispus
Attacks
91
The Impact of the Enlightenment
92
African Americans in the Revolutionary Debate
92
Ц
Q
-ЏШ
Ш
S;
Boston s Slaves Link Their Freedom
to American Liberty
94
Black Enlightenment
95
Phillis Wheatley and Poetry
95
fó<Sł
C E S Phillis
Wheatley on Liberty
and Natural Rights
96
Benjamin
Banneker
and Science
д6
African Americans in the War for Independence
97
Black Loyalists
98
Black Patriots
99
The Revolution and Emancipation
1
ο ι
The
Revolutionär)
Impact
102
The Revolutionaiy Promise
і
04
Conclusion
юг,
Recommended Reading
ioti
Additional
Bibliography
107
Retracing the Odyssey
108
Revieui
Questions
108
imhistorylab Connections
109
5
Mrican Americans in the
New Nation,
1783-1820
Forces for Freedom
1
12
Northern Emancipation
113
The Northwest Ordinance of
1787 110
1 10
χ
CONTENTS
Ρ
R O
1 1
L E
: Elizabeth
Freeman
116
Antislavery Societies in the North
and the Upper South
117
Manumission and Self-Purchase
117
The Emergence of a Free Black Class in the South
118
Forces for Slavery
118
The U.S. Constitution
119
Cotton
120
The Louisiana Purchase and African Americans in the
Lower Mississippi Valley
120
Conservatism and Racism
121
The Emergence of Free Black Communities
122
The Origins of Independent Black Churches
123
V.
Ö
ϊ β Ε
iS Richard Allen on the Break with
St. George s Church
124
The First Black Schools
125
VOICES Absalom Jones Petitions Congress
on Behalf of Fugitives Facing Reenslavement
126
Black Leaders and Choices
127
ľ R O
Y I
I.
К
James
Forten
128
Migration
129
Slave Uprisings
129
The White Southern Reaction
130
The War of
1812 131
The Missouri Compromise
132
Conclusion
134
Recommended Reading
134
Additional
Bibliography
135
Retracing the Odyssey
136
Review
Questions
136
myhislorylab Connections
137
PART II
Slavery, Abolition, and the
Quest for Freedom: The Coming
of the Civil War,
1793-1861 138
6)
Life in the Cotton Kingdom,
1793-1861 140
The Expansion of Slavery
142
Slave Population Growth
142
ľ R
<)
l· I I
К
:
Solomon Northup
143
Ownership of Slaves in the Old South
144
Slave Labor in Agriculture
145
Tobacco
145
Rice
145
Sugar
146
Cotton
147
Cotton and Technology
149
Other Crops
14g
House Servants and Skilled Slaves
150
Urban and Industrial Slavery
150
ШІЙіїШіЯІЇЇ
Frederick Douglass on the Readiness
of Masters to Use the Whip
152
Punishment
152
The Domestic Slave Trade
153
Slave Families
153
P R O F
1 1.
К
:
William Ellison
154
Children
155
ШИІІИИВ
A
Slaveholder Describes a New Purchase
156
Sexual Exploitation
156
Diet
157
Clothing
157
Health
158
The Socialization of Slaves
159
Religion
159
The Character of Slavery and Slaves
160
Conclusion
161
Recommended Reading
161
Additional
Bibliography
162
Retracing the Odyssey
164
Review
Questions
164
myhistorylab Connections
165
І
Pree
Black People in Antebellum
America,
1820-1861 166
Demographics of Freedom
168
The Jacksonian Era
170
Limited Freedom in the North
172
Black Laws
172
Disfranchisement
173
Segregation
174
Black Communities in the Urban North
176
The Black Family
176
The Struggle For Employment
176
The Northern Black Elite
177
МШЙІ^Ш&Ш
Maria W. Stewart on the Condition
of Black Workers
178
Inventors
178
Professionals
179
Artists and Musicians
179
Authors
180
African-American Institutions
181
Churches
181
P R
Ο Κ Ι Ι. Κ
:
Stephen Smith and
William Whipper,
Partners in Business and Reform
182
CONTENTS
Xl
ІВІІР:
The Constitution of the Pittsburgh African
Education Society
183
Schools
184
Voluntary Associations
184
Free African Americans in the Upper South
185
Free African Americans in the Deep South
187
Free African Americans in the Far West
188
Conclusion
1
8g Recommended Reading
189
Additional
Bibliography
190
Retracing the Odyssey
192
Review
Questions
192
myhistorylab Connections
193
8
Opposition to Slavery,
1730-1833 194
Abolitionism Begins in America
196
From Gabriel to Denmark Vesey
197
A Country in Turmoil
199
Political Paranoia
199
The Second Great Awakening
200
The Benevolent Empire
200
Colonization
201
Black Nationalism and Colonization
202
Black Opposition to Colonization
203
Black Abolitionist Women
203
ШШЯВЁШ
William Watkins Opposes Colonization
204
The Baltimore Alliance
205
ľ R
O FII,
F. :
Maria
W.
Stewart
205
ШЯШШШТ
A Black Woman Speaks Out on the Right
to Education
206
David Walker and Nat Turner
207
P R O F I L Ľ
:
David Walker
209
Conclusion
208
Recommended Reading
209
Additional
Bibliography
210
Retracing the Odyssey
212
Reviexu
Questions
212
myhistoiylab Connections
213
Roots of Culture
·*
Freedom s Journal
214
9
tet
Your Motto Be Resistance,
1833-1850
216
A Rising Tide of Racism and Violence
218
Antiblack and Antiabolitionist Riots
219
Texas and the War against Mexico
219
The Antislavery Movement
220
The American Anti-Slavery Society
220
Black and Women s Antislavery Societies
222
Moral Suasion
222
ľ R
О
F
I I,
1 :
Sqjourner Truth
223
Black Community Institutions
224
The Black Convention Movement
225
Black Churches in the Antislavery Cause
225
Black Newspapers
225
V
О Ї
G ES
Frederick Douglass Describes
an Awkward Situation
22(1
The American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society
and the Liberty Party
226
ľ R
()
I I I I
:
Henry Highland Garnet
227
A More Aggressive Abolitionism
228
The
Amistad
and the Creole
228
The Underground Railroad
228
Technolog)
and the Underground Railroad
230
Canada West
230
Black
Militancy
2 31
V
ÖÏ
ĆJK
S Martin
R. Delany Describes His Vision
of a Black Nation
232
Frederick Douglass
232
Revival of Black Nationalism
233
Conclusion
234
Recommended Reading
234
Additional
Bibliography
235
Retracing the Odyssey
23!)
Review
Questions
236
myhistorylab Connections
237
Visualizing the Past
-^ Spkakinc; Out agains
t
Slavery
238
Íl
And Black People Were
at the Heart of It ,
1846-1861
що
The Lure of the West
2 4 2
Free Labor versus Slave Labor
243
The Wilmot Proviso
243
African Americans and the Gold Rush
243
California and the Compromise of
1850 244
Fugitive Slave Laws
245
V O I Čí E S
African Americans Respond to the Fugitive
Slave Law
246
Fugitive Slaves
247
William and Ellen Craft
247
ľ R
O Fl I
F Mary
Ellen Pleasant
248
Shadrach Minkins 249
The Battle At Christiana
249
Anthony
Burns
249
Xli
CONTENTS
P R O F I L
E
:
Thomas Sims, a Fugitive Stove
250
Margaret Garner
251
The Rochester Convention,
1853 251
Nativism and the Know-No things
252
Uncle Tom s Cabin
252
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
253
Preston Brooks Attacks Charles Sumner
254
The Dred Scott Decision
255
Questions for the Court
255
Reaction to the Dred Scott Decision
256
White Northerners and Black Americans
256
PROFIL
E : Martin Deìany
257
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
258
Abraham Lincoln and Black People
258
John Brown and the Raid on Harpers Ferry
258
Planning the Raid
259
The Raid
259
The Reaction
260
The Election of Abraham Lincoln
260
Black People Respond to Lincoln s Election
261
Disunion
261
Conclusion
262
Recommended Reading
263
Additional
Bibliography
263
Retracing the Odyssey
264
Review
Questions
264
myhistorylab Connections
265
PART III
The Civil War, Emancipation,
and Black Reconstruction: The
Second American Revolution
266
11
Liberation: African Americans
and the Civil War,
1861-1865 268
Lincoln s Aims
270
Black Men Volunteer and Are Rejected
271
Union Policies toward Confederate Slaves
271
Contraband
271
Lincoln s Initial Position
272
Lincoln Moves Toward Emancipation
273
Lincoln Delays Emancipation
273
Black People Reject Colonization
273
The Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation
274
Northern Reaction to Emancipation
275
Political Opposition to Emancipation
275
The Emancipation Proclamation
275
Limits of the Proclamation
276
Effects of the Proclamation on the South
276
Black Men Fight
f
or the Union
277
The First South Carolina Volunteers
277
P R O V
!
L E
:
Elizabeth Keckley
279
The Second
South
Carolina Volunteers
280
The 54th Massachusetts Regiment
2 80
Black Soldiers Confront Discrimination
281
Black Men in Combat
281
The Assault on Battery Wagner
282
Olustee
283
The Crater
283
WÊOiIvaSilí
Ш
Leims
Douglass Describes the Fighting
at Battery Wagner
284
The Confederate Reaction to Black Soldiers
284
The Abuse and Murder of Black Troops
284
The Fort Pillow Massacre
285
ШЯІЇЯІВШ
A Black Nurse on the Horrors of War
and the Sacrifice of Black Soldiers
286
Black Men in the Union Navy
286
Liberators, Spies, and Guides
286
Violent Opposition to Black People
287
The New York City Draft Riot
287
Union Troops and Slaves
287
P R O F I L Ľ
:
Harriet
Tubman
288
Refugees
289
Black People and the Confederacy
289
Skilled and Unskilled Slaves in Southern
Industry
289
The Impressment of Black People
290
Confederates Enslave Free Black People
290
Black Confederates
290
Personal Servants
291
Black Men Fighting for the South
291
Black Opposition to the Confederacy
291
The Confederate Debate on Black Troops
292
Conclusion
293
Recommended Reading
294
Additional
Bibliography
294
Retracing the Odyssey
296
Review
Questions
296
myhistorylab Connections
297
Tifi?
Meaning of Freedom: The
Promise of Reconstruction,
1865-1868 298
The End of Slavery
300
Differing Reactions of Former Slaves
Reuniting Black Families
301
Land
301
Special Field Order
#15 302
The Port Royal Experiment
302
301
CONTENTS
хш
The Freedmen s Bureau
302
Southern Homestead Act
303
^JlUfiBiBe A Freedmen s Bureau Commissioner
Tells Freed People What Freedom Means
304
Sharecropping
304
The Black Church
304
Education
306
Black Teachers
307
Black Colleges
308
Response of White Southerners
308
Violence
309
P R
О
F
1
L
F. : Charlotte
E.
Ray 309
The Crusade
for Political and Civil Rights
310
Presidential Reconstruction under Andrew Johnson
311
Ш1в§1|Й§Е8Е
A Northern Black Woman on Teaching
Freedmen
311
Black Codes
312
Black Conventions
312
P R O
F ILE:
Aaron A. Bradley
313
The Radical Republicans
314
Radical Proposals
314
The Freedmen s Bureau Bill and the Civil Rights Bill
315
Johnson s Vetoes
315
The Fourteenth Amendment
315
Radical Reconstruction
316
Universal Manhood Suffrage
316
Black Politics
316
Sit-ins and Strikes
317
The Reaction of White Southerners
317
Conclusion
317
Recommended Reading
318
Additional
Bibliography
318
Retracing the Odyssey
320
Review
Questions
320
myhistorylab Connections
321
Visualizing the Past
Λ
Higher Education for African Americans
Begins
322
ПЗ)
írre
Meaning of Freedom:
The Failure of Reconstruction,
1868-1877 324
Constitutional Conventions
326
Elections
327
Black Political Leaders
327
The Issues
329
Education and Social Welfare
329
Civil Rights
329
Economic Issues
330
P R O F I I F
:
The Gibbs Brothers
330
Land
331
Business and Industry
331
Black Politicians: An Evaluation
331
Republican Factionalism
331
Opposition
332
The Ku Klux
Klan
332
P R O F I F F
:
The
Rollin
Sisters
333
The West
335
V
^Фії
<ß
Ш
S An
Appeal for Help against the
Klan
335
The Fifteenth Amendment
336
The Enforcement Acts
336
The North and Reconstruction
337
#ШІ1ЙЩі
Black Leaders Support the Passage
of a Civil Rights Act
338
The Freedmen s Bank
338
The Civil Rights Act of
1875 339
The End of Reconstruction
339
Violent Redemption
339
The Shotgun Policy
340
The Hamburg Massacre
340
The Compromise of
1877 341
Conclusion
342
Recommended Reading
342
Additional
Bibliography
343
Retracing the Odyssey
344
Review
Questions
345
myhistorylab Connections
345
Roots of Culture
■4
Frances Ei.i.en Watkins Harper, Sketches of
Southern Life
346
PART IV
Searching for Safe Spaces
348
White Supremacy Triumphant:
African Americans in the Late
Nineteenth Century,
1877-1895 350
Politics
353
Black Congressmen
353
Democrats and Farmer Discontent
354
The Colored Farmers Alliance
355
The Populist Party
355
XIV
CONTENTS
Disfranchisement
356
Evading the Fifteenth
Amendment
356
Mississippi
357
South Carolina
357
The Grandfather Clause
357
The Force Bill
358
Segregation
358
Jim Crow
358
Segregation on the Railroads
358
Plessy V. Ferguson
359
Streetcar Segregation
359
Segregation Proliferates
359
ЧРЗДШЙШШ
Majority and Dissenting Opinions
on Plessy v. Ferguson
360
Racial Etiquette
360
Violence
361
Washington County, Texas
361
The Phoenix Riot
361
The Wilmington Riot
361
The New Orleans Riot
362
Lynching
362
Rape
364
ľ R
O lil
1 :
Ida
Weih Barnett 365
Migration 366
The
Liberian
Exodus
366
The Exodusters
366
Migration within the South
367
Black Farm Families
367
Cultivating Cotton
368
Sharecroppers
369
Renters
369
Crop Liens
36g
Peonage
369
Black Landowners
370
White Resentment of Black
Success
370
African Americans and Southern
Courts
370
Segregated Justice
371
УЖІЖЧІЇІ
Cash and Debt for the Black Cotton
Farmer
371
ľ
К о
I· I t.
ι·
Johnson
C. Whittaker
372
The Convict Lease System
373
Conclusion
374
Recommended Reading
375
Additional
Bibliography
375
Retracing the Odyssey
376
Review
Questions
377
myhistorylab Connections
377
Visualizing the Past
<
Going Back to Africa
378
Of
African Americans Challenge
White Supremacy,
1877-1918
380
Social Darwinism
382
Education and Schools
383
Segregated Schools
384
The Hampton Model
384
Booker T. Washington and the Tuskegee Model
385
ЩЯШІІИЇІ
Thomas E. Miller and the Mission
of the Black Land-Grant College
386
Critics of the Tuskegee Model
386
Church and Religion
387
The Church as Solace and Escape
388
The Holiness Movement and the Pentecostal
Church
389
Roman Catholics and Episcopalians
389
P R O F
1
L E
:
Henry
McNeał
Turner
390
Red versus Black: The Buffalo Soldiers
391
Discrimination in the Army
392
The Buffalo Soldiers in Combat
392
Civilian Hostility to Black Soldiers
393
Brownsville
393
African Americans in the Navy
394
The Black Cowboys
394
The Spanish-American War
394
Black Officers
395
A Splendid Little War
395
ШвІіИ^Ш
Black Men in Battle in Cuba
396
After the War
396
The Philippine Insurrection
397
Would Black Men Fight Brown Men?
397
African Americans and the World s Columbian
Exposition
397
Black Businesspeople and Entrepreneurs
398
African Americans and Labor
399
Unions
399
PROFI
L K
:
Maggie Lena Walker
400
Strikes
401
Black Professionals
401
Medicine
401
The Law
402
P R
О
1 1
I Ľ
:
A Man and His Horse: Dr. William
Key and Beautifidjim Key
403
Music
404
Ragtime
404
Jazz
404
The Blues
405
CONTENTS
XV
Sports 405
JackJohnson 405
Baseball 406
Basketball
and Other
Sports 406
College
Athletics
406
Conclusion
407
Recommended Reading
407
Additional
Bibliography
407
Retracing the Odyssey
409
Review
Questions
410
myhistorylab Connections
411
m
Conciliation, Agitation, and
Migration: African Americans
in the Early Twentieth Century,
1895-1928
4i2
Race and the Progressive Movement
415
Booker T. Washington s Approach
415
Washington s Influence
416
The Tuskegee Machine
416
Opposition to Washington
417
W.
Е. В.
Du Bois
417
ШШШШЕШ
W.
Е. В.
Du Bois on
Being
Black
in America
418
The SouL· qf Black Folk
419
The Talented Tenth
419
The Niagara
Movement
419
The NAACP
420
Using the System
420
Du Bois
and the Crisis
421
Washington versus the NAACP
421
ľ R O F
I
F F
:
Mary Church
Тети
422
The Urban League
423
Black Women and the Club Movement
423
The NACW: Lifting as We Climb
423
Phillis Wheatley Clubs
424
Anna Julia Cooper and Black Feminism
424
Women s Suffrage
424
The Black Elite
424
P R O F I F K
Jane Edna Hunter and the
Phillis
WheaÜey
Association
425
The American Negro Academy
426
The Upper Class
426
Fraternities and Sororities
426
African-American Inventors
427
Presidential Politics
428
Frustrated by the Republicans
428
Woodrow Wilson
428
Black Men and the Military in World War I
428
The Punitive Expedition to Mexico
428
ľ R
() 1 1
I F
:
George Washington Carver
and Ernest Everettjust
429
World War I
430
Black Troops and Officers
430
Discrimination and Its Effects
431
Du Bois s
Disappointment
432
Race Riots
432
Atlanta,
1906 433
Springfield,
1908 434
East St. Louis,
1917 434
Houston,
1917 434
Chicago,
1919 435
Elaine,
1919 436
Tulsa,
1921 436
Rosewood,
1923 437
The Great Migration
437
Why Migrate?
437
Destinations
439
ШЩ.
ШІИРЇК
A Migrant to the North Writes Home
440
Migration From the Caribbean
440
Northern Communities
440
Chicago
441
Harlem
441
Families
442
Conclusion
443
Recommended Reading
443
Additional
Bibliography
444
Retracing the Odyssey
446
Revint)
Questions
447
myhistorylab Connections
447
Roots of
Сіл
t
íj rí;
•4
The Photography okJames Van
Der Zee
448
W
African Americans and the
1920s,
1918-1929
453
45°
Strikes and the Red Scare
Varieties of Racism
453
Scientific Racism
453
The Birth of A Nation
453
The Ku Klux
Klan
454
Protest, Pride, and Pan-Africanism: Black
Organizations in the
1920s 455
The NAACP
455
The Negro National Anthem: Lift Every
Voice and Sing
456
Up You Mighty Race : Marcus Garvey and the
UNIA
456
ľ R O F
I
1
F James
Weldon
Johnson
457
XVI
CONTENTS
The African Blood Brotherhood
459
Pan-Africanism
45g
ЩЩ І ЖгІК
S
Marcus Garvey Appeals
for a New
African Nation
460
Labor
460
The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
462
A. Philip Randolph
462
The Harlem Renaissance
463
Before Harlem
463
Writers and Artists
465
White People and the Harlem Renaissance
467
Harlem and the Jazz Age
468
Song, Dance, and Stage
469
P R O F I L f:
:
Bessie
Smith
470
Sports
471
Rube
Foster
471
College Sports
471
Conclusion
472
Recommended Reading
473
Additional
Bibliography
47 3
Retracing the Odyssey
474
Revieiu
Questions
475
myhistorylab Connections
475
PART V
The Great Depression
and World War II
476
08)
Black Protest, the Great
Depression, and the New Deal,
1929-1940 478
The Cataclysm,
1929-1933 480
Harder Times for Black America
481
Black Businesses in the Depression:
Collapse and Survival
482
The Failure of Relief
484
Black Protest during the Great Depression
485
The NAACP and Civil Rights Straggles
485
Du Bois
Ignites a Controversy
485
Challenging Racial Discrimination in
the Courts
486
Black Women and Community Organizing
487
African Americans and the New Deal
489
Roosevelt and the First New Deal,
1933-1935 489
Black Officials in the New Deal
490
The Rise of Black Social Scientists
491
Social Scientists and the New Deal
492
ľ R O F
1
L E
:
RobertC. Weaver
492
African Americans and the Second New Deal
493
Ì
ІІІІІІЩЯІІ
A Black Sharecropper Details Abuse in the
Administration of Agricultural Relief
494
F R O I I L
E
:
Mary
Mckod
Bethune
495
Organized Labor and Black America
497
WiffÈÊÊÊHÊ
A. Philip Randolph Inspires a Young Black
Activist
497
The Communist Party and African Americans
498
The International Labor Defense and the
Scottsboro Boys
498
P R O F
ILE: Angelo
Herndon 499
Debating Communist Leadership
500
The National Negro Congress
501
Misuses of Medical Science: The Tuskegee Study
501
Ш|ЯїЯіІЇА
Hoboing in Alabama
502
Conclusion
503
Recommended Reading
503
Additional
Bibliography
503
Retracing the Odyssey
505
Review
Questions
506
myhistorylab Connections
507
as
Meanings of Freedom: Culture
and Society in the
1930s, 1940s,
and
1950s, 1930-1950
5o8
Black Culture in a Midwestern City
511
The Black Culture Industry and American Racism
512
The Music Culture from Swing to Bebop
512
Popular Culture for the Masses: Comic Strips, Radio,
and Movies
513
The Comics
513
P R O F I L F
:
Charlie
Parker
514
Radio and Jazz Musicians and Technological
Change
515
Radio and Black Disc Jockeys
515
Radio and Race
516
Radio and Destination Freedom
516
Race, Representation, and the Movies
517
The Black Chicago Renaissance
519
ľ R
C)
F
1
I.
F
:
Langston
Hughes
521
ШШШЕШЅЕЕЕЕе
Margaret Walker on Black Culture
522
Gospel in Chicago: Thomas Dorsey
523
Chicago in Dance and Song:
Katherine
Dunham and
Billie
Holiday
523
Black Visual Art
524
Black Literature
525
Richard Wright s Native Son
525
CONTENTS
XVII
PRO
F
I I.
E
:
Billie
Holiday and Strange Fruit
526
James Baldwin Challenges Wright
528
Ralph Ellison and Invisible Man
528
African Americans in Sports
528
Jesse Owens and Joe Louis
528
Breaking the Color Barrier in Baseball
529
Black Religious Culture
530
The Nation of Islam
530
Father Divine and the Peace Mission
Movement
530
Conclusion
531
Recommended Reading
531
Additional
Bibliography
532
Retracing the Odyssey
534
Review
Questions
535
myhistorylab Connections
535
Roots of Culture
Λ
Katherine
Dunham
536
ТВё
World War II Era and
the Seeds of a Revolution,
1936-1948 538
On the Eve of War,
1936-1941 541
African Americans and the Emerging World Crisis
541
A. Philip Randolph and the March on Washington
Movement
542
Executive Order
8802 543
Race and the U.S. Armed Forces
544
ľ R O F I I F
:
Steven Robinson and the
Monţford
Point
Marines
545
Institutional Racism in the American Military
546
The Costs of
Militar)
Discrimination
546
Soldiers and Civilians Protest Military
Discrimination
547
ШИЙЯЙ!
William H.
Hastie
Resigns in Protest
548
Black Women in the Struggle to Desegregate the
Militar)
549
The Beginning of
Militar)
Desegregation
549
ШЩЩ@ШШ
Separate but Equal Training for Black
Army Nurses?
550
P R
О
F
I I
E
:
Mabel
К.
Staupers 551
ИЕЯЯвМШ
A
Tuskegee
Airman Remembers
552
The Tuskegee Airmen
552
Technology: The Tuskegee Planes
552
The Transformation of Black Soldiers
553
Black People on the Home Front
554
Black Workers: From Farm to Factory
554
The Fepc during the War
555
Anatomy of a Race Riot: Detroit,
1943 555
The G.I. Bill of Rights and Black Veterans
556
Old and New Protest Groups on the Home Front
556
ľ
RO
F I L F.
:
Bayard
Rustin
557
The Transition to Peace
558
The Cold War and International Politics
558
African Americans in World Affairs: W.
E. B.
Du Bois
and Ralph Bunche
559
Anticommunism at Home
560
Paul Robeson
560
Henry Wallace and the
1948
Presidential
Election
560
Desegregating the Armed Forces
561
Conclusion
562
Recommended Reading
562
Additional
Bibliography
563 Retraf
ing the Odyssey
565
Revieiu
Questions
565
myhistorylab Connections
565
Visualizing the Past
<
AiRican-American Soldiers in World War ii
566
PART VI
The Black Revolution
568
Trie Freedom Movement,
1950-1965 570
The
1950s:
Prosperity and Prejudice
573
The Road to Brown
573
Constance Baker Motley and Black Lawyers in
the South
573
Brown and the Coming Revolution
575
Broun II
577
Massive White Resistance
577
The Lynching of Emmett Till
577
^ШЕШВШШ
Letter of the Montgomery Women s Political
Council to Mayor W. A. Gayle
578
New Forms of Protest: The Montgomery Bus
Boycott
579
The Roots of Revolution
579
Rosa Parks
579
Montgomery Improvement Association
580
Martin Luther Kingjr.
580
PROFILI-: Rosa
Louise McCauley Parks
581
Walking For Freedom
582
Friends in the North
582
Victor)
583
XVIII
CONTENTS
No Easy Road to Freedom:
1957-1960 583
Martin Luther King and the SCLC
583
Civil Rights Act of
1957 583
Little Rock, Arkansas
584
Black Youth Stand Up by Sitting Down
584
Sit-ins: Greensboro, Nashville, Atlanta
584
The Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee
586
Freedom Rides
586
ľ R
Ο 1·
i L F.
: Robert
Parris
Moses 587
A Sight to Be Seen: The Movement at High Tide
588
The Election of
1960 588
The Kennedy Administration and the
Chil
Rights
Movement
588
Voter Registration Projects
589
The Albany Movement
589
ľ R í
) 1 ·
і
1 1 :
Fannie Lou
Hamer
589
The Birmingham Confrontation
590
A Hard Victory
591
The March on Washington
591
The Civil Rights Act of
1964 593
Mississippi Freedom Summer
593
The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party
594
Selma
and the Voting Rights Act of
1965 595
¡
К О
I I
1 1
Dorothy Irene Hei^t
596
Conclusio?!
597
Recommended Reading
598
Additional
Bibliography
599
Retracing the Odyssey
601
Review
(¿uestions
602
myliistorylab Connections
603
Roots of
Culture
<
Freedom Singf.rs
604
Slack Nationalism, Black Power,
Black Arts,
1965-1980
боб
The Fading Dream of Racial Integration: Black
Nationalism
608
Malcolm X
609
Malcolm X s New Departure
610
Stokely Carmichael and Black Power
610
The National Council of Churches
611
The Black Panther Party
6
1
s>
Police Repression and the FBI s Cointelpro
613
ДШЯШЯ^Ш
The Black Panther Party Platform
613
Prisoners Rights
614
The Inner-City Rebellions
615
Watts
615
Newark
615
Detroit
615
The Kerner Commission
616
Difficulties in Creating the Great Society
617
Johnson and the War in Vietnam
618
Black Americans and the Vietnam War
618
Project
100,000 618
Johnson: Vietnam Destroys the Great Society
618
ШЩШШШШ
They Called Each Other
Bloods
620
King: Searching for a New Strategy
620
ľ R O I i L K
:
Muhammad
Ali
621
King
on the
Vietnam
War
622
King s Murder
622
The Black Arts Movement and Black
Consciousness
622
Poetry and Theater
624
ľ R
О
F
1 1
E
:
Lorraine Hansberry
625
Music
626
The Second Phase of the Black Student
Movement
626
The
Orangeburg
Massacre
627
Black Studies
627
The Election of
1968 628
The Nixon Presidency
629
The Moynihan Report and FAP
629
Busing
629
Nixon and the War
630
Nixon s Downfall
630
The Rise of Black Elected Officials
631
The Gary Convention and the Black Political
Agenda
631
Shirley Chisholm: I Am the People s Politician
632
Black People Gain Local Offices
632
Economic Downturn
633
Black Americans and the Carter Presidency
633
Black Appointees
633
ШІИШ
Shirley Chhholm s Speech to the U.S. House
of Representatives
633
Carter s Domestic Policies
634
Conclusion
634
Recommended Reading
635
Additional
Bibliography
635
Retracing the Odyssey
638
Review
Qiiestions
638
myhistorylab Connections
639
Visualizing the Past
■4
Signs of Protest in the Struggle
for Equality
640
CONTENTS
XIX
ÃFrican
Americans at the
Millennium,
1980-2010
642
Progress and Poverty: Income, Education, and Health
645
High-Achieving African Americans
645
African Americans Growing Economic Security
646
ľ R O ľ
I I.
К
:
Mark Dean s Computer Inventions
646
The Persistence of Black Poverty
647
Impact of the
2008-2010
Economic Recession on
Employed Black Women
648
Racial Incarceration
649
Education One-Half Century After Broiun
649
Challenging Brown
649
The Health Gap
650
African Americans at the Center of Art and Culture
651
ľ R
<) 1
I
1 1 :
Michael Jackson: Man in the Mirror
653
The Hip-Hop Nation
654
Origins of a New Music: A Generation Defines Itself
654
Rap Music Goes Mainstream
655
Gangsta Rap
655
African-American Intellectuals
655
Afrocentricity
656
African-American Studies Matures
657
Black Religion at the Dawn of the Millennium
657
Black Christians on the Front Line
658
Tensions in the Black Church
658
Black Muslims
659
Louis Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam
660
Millennium Marches
661
Complicating Black Identity in the Twenty-First
Century
661
Immigration and African Americans
663
Black Feminism
663
тШШШШЕ.
Lynn Harris
664
Gay and Lesbian African Americans
665
Conclusion
666
Recommended Reading
666
Additional
Bibliography
667
Retracing the Odyssey
668
Review
Questions
668
myhistorylab Connections
669
ïFtriumph
of Black Politics:
1980
to the Present,
1980-2010 670
Ronald Reagan and the Conservative Reaction
673
Dismantling the Great
Societ)
673
Black Conservatives
674
The Thomas-Hill Controversy
674
Debating the Old and the New Civil Rights
675
ШШЕШШШ
Black Women in Defense of Themselves
676
Affirmative Action
677
The Backlash
677
Black Political Activism in the Age of Conservative
Reaction
67g
The King Holiday
679
Transafrica
and the
Antiapartheid
Movement
679
Jesse Jackson and the Rainbow Coalition
680
Policing the Black Community
68
1
Human Rights in America
682
The Clinton Presidency
683
It s the Economy, Stupid!
684
Clinton Signs the Welfare Reform Act
684
Republicans Challenge Clinton
685
Black Politics in the New Millennium:
The Contested
2000
Presidential Election
686
Gore v. Bush
686
Republican Triumph
68(5
George W. Bush s Black Cabinet
687
Education Reform: No Child Left Behind
687
Reparations
687
September
11,2001 688
War
688
The
2004
Presidential Election
689
Bush s Second Term
689
The Iraq War
689
Hurricane Katrina and the Destruction
of Black New Orleans
690
Barack
Obama,
President of the
United States
(З9
1
Obama
versus McCain
69)
ľ R n
I I
1
I
Barack
Obama
(ky¿
2008
Election Results
693
ľ K o K
I I.
1. ■
MichelleLavaughnRobinson
Obama
ľny,
Conclusion
694
Recommended Rending
695
Additional
Bibliography
695
Retracing the Odwsey
696
Review
Questions
697
nrshistorylah Connections
69-
Epilogue:
A Nation within a Nation
698
Appendix A-
1
Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts G-
1
Presidents and Vice Presidents of the United States P-
1
Historially Black Four-Year Colleges and Universities I-
1
Photo and Text Credits C-
1
Index I-
1
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Hine, Darlene Clark Hine, William C. Harrold, Stanley |
author_facet | Hine, Darlene Clark Hine, William C. Harrold, Stanley |
author_role | aut aut aut |
author_sort | Hine, Darlene Clark |
author_variant | d c h dc dch w c h wc wch s h sh |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV040725721 |
callnumber-first | E - United States History |
callnumber-label | E185 |
callnumber-raw | E185 |
callnumber-search | E185 |
callnumber-sort | E 3185 |
callnumber-subject | E - United States History |
classification_rvk | NK 4600 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)828793124 (DE-599)BVBBV040725721 |
dewey-full | 973/.0496073 |
dewey-hundreds | 900 - History & geography |
dewey-ones | 973 - United States |
dewey-raw | 973/.0496073 |
dewey-search | 973/.0496073 |
dewey-sort | 3973 6496073 |
dewey-tens | 970 - History of North America |
discipline | Geschichte |
edition | Combined vol., 5. ed. |
format | Book |
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geographic | USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd |
geographic_facet | USA |
id | DE-604.BV040725721 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:32:33Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780205728817 0205728812 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-025705849 |
oclc_num | 828793124 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
physical | Getr. Zählung Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2011 |
publishDateSearch | 2011 |
publishDateSort | 2011 |
publisher | Prentice Hall |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Hine, Darlene Clark Verfasser aut The African-American odyssey Darlene Clark Hine ; William C. Hine ; Stanley Harrold Combined vol., 5. ed. Boston [u.a.] Prentice Hall 2011 Getr. Zählung Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Geschichte Schwarze. USA African Americans African Americans History Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 gnd rswk-swf Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 s Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 s DE-604 Hine, William C. Verfasser aut Harrold, Stanley Verfasser aut Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025705849&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Hine, Darlene Clark Hine, William C. Harrold, Stanley The African-American odyssey Geschichte Schwarze. USA African Americans African Americans History Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 gnd Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4020517-4 (DE-588)4116433-7 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | The African-American odyssey |
title_auth | The African-American odyssey |
title_exact_search | The African-American odyssey |
title_full | The African-American odyssey Darlene Clark Hine ; William C. Hine ; Stanley Harrold |
title_fullStr | The African-American odyssey Darlene Clark Hine ; William C. Hine ; Stanley Harrold |
title_full_unstemmed | The African-American odyssey Darlene Clark Hine ; William C. Hine ; Stanley Harrold |
title_short | The African-American odyssey |
title_sort | the african american odyssey |
topic | Geschichte Schwarze. USA African Americans African Americans History Geschichte (DE-588)4020517-4 gnd Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Geschichte Schwarze. USA African Americans African Americans History Schwarze USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025705849&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hinedarleneclark theafricanamericanodyssey AT hinewilliamc theafricanamericanodyssey AT harroldstanley theafricanamericanodyssey |