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Title African American political thought, 1890-1930 : Washington, Du Bois, Garvey, and Randolph / edited by Cary D. Wintz
Published London [England] ; New York, New York : Routledge, 2015
©1996

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Description 1 online resource (360 pages) : illustrations, photographs
Contents Cover ; Half Title ; Title Page ; Copyright Page ; Dedication ; Table of Contents ; Preface ; Introduction ; Selected Bibliography; I. Booker T. Washington; 1 Letter to the Editor, Montgomery Advertiser, April 30, 1885; 2 Atlanta Exposition Address; 3 Address at the Unveiling of the Monument to Robert Gould Shaw; 4 Open Letter to the Louisiana Constitutional Convention, February 19, 1898; 5 Letter to W.E.B. Du Bois, October 26, 1899; 6 Interview, Atlanta Constitution, November 10, 1899; 7 Letter to W.E.B. Du Bois, March 11, 1900
8 Letter to the Editor of the Montgomery Advertiser, September 23, 19019 Letter to Theodore Roosevelt, October 16, 1901; 10 The Negro and the Signs of Civilization; 11 Statement on Suffrage, Philadelphia North American; 12 Statement Before the Washington Conference on the Race Problem in the United States; 13 Speech to the National Afro-American Council; 14 Letter to W.E.B. Du Bois, January 27, 1904; 15 A Protest against Lynching; 16 The Negro and the Labor Problem of the South; 17 Letter to President Theodore Roosevelt, December 26, 1904
18 The Negro in the North: Are His Advantages as Great as in the South19 Letter to William Howard Taft, June 4, 1908; 20 A Statement on Lynching; 21 Letter to the Editor, Montgomery Advertiser, December 30, 1910; 22 Letter to C. Elias Winston, October 2, 1914; 23 Speech to the National Negro Business League, August 18, 1915; 24 My View of Segregation Laws; II. W.E.B. Du Bois; 1 Letter to Booker T. Washington, September 24, 1895; 2 Strivings of the Negro People; 3 Letter to Booker T. Washington, February 17, 1900; 4 The Evolution of Negro Leadership; 5 The Parting of the Ways
6 Letter to Oswald Garrison Villard, March 24, 19057 Declaration of Principles; 8 Two Editorials: The Crisis and Agitation -- 9 A Philosophy for 1913; 10 The Immediate Program of the American Negro; 11 Booker T. Washington and An Open Letter to Robert Russa Moton -- 12 Close Ranks; 13 Returning Soldiers; 14 White Co-workers; 15 Marcus Garvey; 16 A Lunatic or a Traitor; 17 The Tragedy of Jim Crow -- 18 The New Crisis; 19 Race Relations in the United States; 20 Economic Disfranchisement; 21 Marxism and the Negro Problem; 22 Pan-Africa and New Racial Philosophy; 23 Segregation
24 The Board of Directors on Segregation25 A Negro Nation within the Nation; III. Marcus Garvey; 1 The Negro's Greatest Enemy; 2 Letter to Robert Russa Moton, February 29, 1916; 3 West Indies in the Mirror of Truth; 4 Editorials in Negro World: Advice of the Negro to Peace Conference and Race Discrimination Must Go -- 5 George Cross Van Dusen to J. Edgar Hoover, March 19, 1921; 6 Address to the New York City Division of the UNIA, January 26, 1919; 7 Address to UNIA Supporters in Philadelphia, October 21, 1919; 8 Declaration of the Rights of the Negro Peoples of the World
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject African Americans -- Politics and government -- Sources
African Americans -- History -- 1877-1964 -- Sources
Political science -- United States -- History -- Sources
African Americans
African Americans -- Politics and government
Political science
United States
Genre/Form History
Sources
Form Electronic book
Author Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963
Washington, Booker T., 1856-1915
Garvey, Marcus, 1887-1940
Randolph, A. Philip (Asa Philip), 1889-1979
Wintz, Cary D., 1943- editor
ISBN 9781315706641
1315706644