This article examines the first newspaper operated, published, and distributed by free blacks in the United States during the first half of the nineteenth century, Freedom’s Journal. Despite being active for merely two years, the New York-based periodical managed to unite African Americans across different states by becoming their mouthpiece. The first part of the article examines well-established historical facts including information about the editors, the readership, and the methods of distribution. The second part examines changes brought to the journalistic field by African Americans, while part three analyzes excerpts from a debate between proponents of the colonization movement, and their African American opponents. The final p...
Marks shows that when Black people attempted to better their lives, they challenged extant racialize...
The education of free African American children in the antebellum period is a subject that has inter...
The black press appears not to have anticipated the NAACP would emerge as the nation’s largest and m...
The first African American newspaper, Freedom\u27s Journal, has a historical, rhetorical, and spatia...
The black press was born out of a need and that need is still pertinent today. Before 1827, black pe...
Being Chosen, Being Free Over the past two decades scholars from several disciplines and subfields h...
AbstractFreedom's Journal and El Clamor Público: African Americanand Mexican American Cultural Front...
From 1827 to 1841 the black newspapers Freedom’s Journal and the Colored American of New York City w...
This study examines the first one hundred years of the black press, primarily through a content anal...
This article examines the border-crossing journalism of the Negro Digest, a leading African American...
“Today in Media History, a daily Poynter Online column from 2014-2015, shared journalism and media ...
In An African American Discourse Community in Black & White: The New Orleans Tribune, an archival st...
This article shows how and why some free black families ended up living among the enslaved in the la...
In a strange land Scholar reunites American and African-American histories Between 1787 and 1791,...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
Marks shows that when Black people attempted to better their lives, they challenged extant racialize...
The education of free African American children in the antebellum period is a subject that has inter...
The black press appears not to have anticipated the NAACP would emerge as the nation’s largest and m...
The first African American newspaper, Freedom\u27s Journal, has a historical, rhetorical, and spatia...
The black press was born out of a need and that need is still pertinent today. Before 1827, black pe...
Being Chosen, Being Free Over the past two decades scholars from several disciplines and subfields h...
AbstractFreedom's Journal and El Clamor Público: African Americanand Mexican American Cultural Front...
From 1827 to 1841 the black newspapers Freedom’s Journal and the Colored American of New York City w...
This study examines the first one hundred years of the black press, primarily through a content anal...
This article examines the border-crossing journalism of the Negro Digest, a leading African American...
“Today in Media History, a daily Poynter Online column from 2014-2015, shared journalism and media ...
In An African American Discourse Community in Black & White: The New Orleans Tribune, an archival st...
This article shows how and why some free black families ended up living among the enslaved in the la...
In a strange land Scholar reunites American and African-American histories Between 1787 and 1791,...
This special thematic issue of the Civil War Book Review is dedicated to recent works that uncover, ...
Marks shows that when Black people attempted to better their lives, they challenged extant racialize...
The education of free African American children in the antebellum period is a subject that has inter...
The black press appears not to have anticipated the NAACP would emerge as the nation’s largest and m...