African American History to Emancipation explores the history, memory, and representation of enslavement and abolition in the United States. The key questions we are posing are: how do we recover the unrecoverable and how do we remember the “unrememberable?” We will consider the history of enslavement in the Atlantic World, its legacies in the United States, the gaps in our knowledge, the global trauma of Atlantic World Slavery, and contemporary and contemporaneous representations. Key themes include: the formation of the Atlantic World, enslavement, the transatlantic slave trade, slavery in the United States, the formation of African American cultures, the emergence of race and racism, resistance and rebellion, abolition, emancipation and ...
This article argues that contemporary antislavery activism in the United States is programmatically ...
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
This article describes an inquiry lesson, recommended for upper elementary and middle level students...
African American History to Emancipation explores the history, memory, and representation of enslave...
This syllabus is designed for a lecture course on Post-Emancipation African American history
Our work in this course will center around two questions. First, what were the material and social c...
This class is Introduction to Black roots from ancient Africa to contemporary America as an orientat...
COURSE DESCRIPTION: A study of the political, economic, social, and demographic challenges confronti...
This syllabus reflects having students do self-guided research over a semester that doesn\u27t requi...
The transatlantic slave trade was the largest forced migration in history. It involved an interconti...
After extensive amount of research we collectively agreed we wanted to showcase this history by taki...
This interdisciplinary unit focuses on the institution of slavery and the many forms in which it man...
Slavery is quite possibly the most integral issue to understanding the history of the United States....
In this lesson, students will take a narrowly focused view on the slave trade by investigating the s...
A survey course that will take us from the early days of enslavement to the present. We will read, a...
This article argues that contemporary antislavery activism in the United States is programmatically ...
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
This article describes an inquiry lesson, recommended for upper elementary and middle level students...
African American History to Emancipation explores the history, memory, and representation of enslave...
This syllabus is designed for a lecture course on Post-Emancipation African American history
Our work in this course will center around two questions. First, what were the material and social c...
This class is Introduction to Black roots from ancient Africa to contemporary America as an orientat...
COURSE DESCRIPTION: A study of the political, economic, social, and demographic challenges confronti...
This syllabus reflects having students do self-guided research over a semester that doesn\u27t requi...
The transatlantic slave trade was the largest forced migration in history. It involved an interconti...
After extensive amount of research we collectively agreed we wanted to showcase this history by taki...
This interdisciplinary unit focuses on the institution of slavery and the many forms in which it man...
Slavery is quite possibly the most integral issue to understanding the history of the United States....
In this lesson, students will take a narrowly focused view on the slave trade by investigating the s...
A survey course that will take us from the early days of enslavement to the present. We will read, a...
This article argues that contemporary antislavery activism in the United States is programmatically ...
History education researchers in the U.S. have largely focused on students’ capacities to improve th...
This article describes an inquiry lesson, recommended for upper elementary and middle level students...