This integrated set of essays introduces students to the complexities of researching and analyzing "race". Chapters focus on the problems historians and social scientists, white and black, north and south, confronted while researching, writing, and interpreting race and slavery from the late nineteenth century until 1953.
John B. Boles and Evelyn Thomas Nolen (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1987), 182; Cox, “From Emancipation to Segregation: National Policy and Southern Blacks,” in Boles and Nolen, eds., ...
Greener, “The White Problem,” Indianapolis Freeman, September 1, 8, 1894. ... (New York: International, 1955), 4:471–473; Crogman, “The Negro's Needs,” Talks for the Times, 144; Nathan B. Young, “A Race Without an Ideal,” A.M.E. Church ...
Family (1400–1972) (Fort Worth, TX: Miran, 1973), 18–156; DanielWalker Hollis, University ofSouth Carolina (Columbia: University of South Caro- lina Press, 1951–56), I:7–8, 98–99; Edwin L. Green, A History ofthe Uni- versity ofSouth ...
6 Pacquette, Sugar Is Made with Blood, 131—57, 183—205; David Murray, “The Slave Trade, Slavery, and Cuban Independence,” Slavery and Abolition 20 (Dec. 1999): 106; William Cullen Bryant to the New York Evening Post, Havana, Apr. 7, ...
Albert van Dantzig and Adam Jones ( Oxford : Oxford University Press , 1987 ) , p . ... 277-312 ; Martin W. Lewis and Karen E. Wigen , The Myth of the Continents : A Critique of Metageography ( Berkeley : University of California Press ...
Less than two years later the Republican territorial governor of Colorado, John Evans, would echo the words of his Minnesota counterpart, pleading with a nearby commander to bring “all the forces you can then” to “pursue, ...
Quoted in Michael Anesko, “Friction with the Market”: Henry James and the Profession of Authorship (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), 87. 5. The Bostonians: A Novel (New York: Modern Library, 1965); page numbers given in the ...
This book analyses the impact of American Revolutionary ideology upon conceptions of the place of slavery in American society.
Surveying a period from the late seventeenth century—the era in which W.E.B. Du Bois located the emergence of “whiteness”—through the American Revolution and the Civil War to the civil rights movement and the emergence of the ...
The Story of the Negro: The Rise of the Race from Slavery