Description |
xvi, 404 pages ; 24 cm |
Series |
Blacks in the New World |
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Blacks in the New World.
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Contents |
Frederick Douglass's vision for America: a case study in nineteenth-century Negro protest -- W.E.B. Du Bois as sociologist -- Booker T. Washington and the Negro press -- Booker T. Washington and the rise of the NAACP -- The rise of the Black secretariat in the NAACP, 1909-35 -- Attorneys black and white: a case study of race relations within the NAACP -- On the role of Martin Luther King -- The emergency of Negro nationalism: a study in ideologies -- Booker T. Washington and the town of Mount Bayou -- Black violence in the twentieth century: a study in rhetoric and retaliation -- Integration vs. separatism: the NAACP and CORE face challenge from within -- The boycott movement against Jim Crow streetcars in the South, 1900-1906 -- Early boycotts of segregated schools: the case of Springfield, Ohio, 1922-23 -- The origins of nonviolent direct action in Afro-American protest: a note on historical discontinuities |
Analysis |
United States Black persons to 1980 |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references |
Subject |
African Americans -- Civil rights -- History.
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African Americans -- Civil rights.
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African Americans -- History.
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SUBJECT |
United States -- Race relations.
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85140494
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Author |
Rudwick, Elliott M., author
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LC no. |
76027293 |
ISBN |
0252006364 |
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