Black Foremothers is a much needed book written about the lives of three important black women: Ellen Craft, Ida B. Wells and Mary Church Terrell. The author, Dorothy Sterling, is to be commended for her ability to piece together the lives of these women and present them in such an interesting manner. In the foreword, Margaret Walker states that the author is highly qualified to write biographies of black women because of her intense study of American black people for at least twenty-five years
This book is a recorded autobiography, but it is also much more. In the preface Blackman traces her ...
Review of Too Much to Ask: Black Women in the Era of Integration by Elizabeth Higginbotha
Historical studies with regard to the history of African descendents have recently evinced new effor...
In this ethnohistory of American Indian education, Margaret Szasz broadly interprets education to me...
Just as the mixing of peoples has been a dominant theme in American social history, it has also been...
In this book, Minrose Gwin explores the interrelationships between women as a model of Southern raci...
This book is a valuable contribution to African and African American studies in that it brings toget...
In her Preface to this study, Lean\u27tin Bracks describes her purpose as being to describe a mod...
The original edition of The Ethnic American Woman was published in 1978 with 381 pages. For the 1989...
This collection chronicles the longstanding and diverse experiences of African American women across...
In recent years writings by black women outside of the US have gained acceptance, and many such work...
African people have been a presence in Europe for thousands of years. As the author notes, Julius C...
Despite almost four hundred years of racism, sexism and classism, Afro-American women have managed t...
Edited by Ellen C. DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, two respected historians, Unequal Sisters: A Multicultu...
Except for books such as The Negro Cowboys, the African American West remains an enigma to most Amer...
This book is a recorded autobiography, but it is also much more. In the preface Blackman traces her ...
Review of Too Much to Ask: Black Women in the Era of Integration by Elizabeth Higginbotha
Historical studies with regard to the history of African descendents have recently evinced new effor...
In this ethnohistory of American Indian education, Margaret Szasz broadly interprets education to me...
Just as the mixing of peoples has been a dominant theme in American social history, it has also been...
In this book, Minrose Gwin explores the interrelationships between women as a model of Southern raci...
This book is a valuable contribution to African and African American studies in that it brings toget...
In her Preface to this study, Lean\u27tin Bracks describes her purpose as being to describe a mod...
The original edition of The Ethnic American Woman was published in 1978 with 381 pages. For the 1989...
This collection chronicles the longstanding and diverse experiences of African American women across...
In recent years writings by black women outside of the US have gained acceptance, and many such work...
African people have been a presence in Europe for thousands of years. As the author notes, Julius C...
Despite almost four hundred years of racism, sexism and classism, Afro-American women have managed t...
Edited by Ellen C. DuBois and Vicki L. Ruiz, two respected historians, Unequal Sisters: A Multicultu...
Except for books such as The Negro Cowboys, the African American West remains an enigma to most Amer...
This book is a recorded autobiography, but it is also much more. In the preface Blackman traces her ...
Review of Too Much to Ask: Black Women in the Era of Integration by Elizabeth Higginbotha
Historical studies with regard to the history of African descendents have recently evinced new effor...