In an ambitious effort to document the positive role that the black man has played throughout history, Tarharka has proposed a nontraditional interpretation of that role on the basis of extensive library research. As a result, he calls the credibility of most western scholars into question. Support of his thesis is offered by first reminding the reader that the earth\u27s original man was of Africa and how that man was responsible for initiating human culture and civilization
The editors are a civil rights worker (Cabell) and an academician (Turner) who evidence a longstandi...
George M. Fredrickson, Edgar E. Robinson Professor of United States History at Stanford University, ...
As an historian, Ronald L. Lewis has researched the role of blacks in the coal mining industry, an o...
This scholarly study is a welcome effort to broaden the horizon of what many Americans have come to ...
This volume consists of twelve essays that address the history of black newspapers in the states tha...
It is not often that a person can pick up a book and read it with clarity and understanding, especia...
In 1925 Professor Alain Locke argued in The New Negro that the Negro was moving forward under the c...
A startling look at black separatist movements of the past reveals interesting facts that parallel t...
St. Clair Drake, the recently deceased anthropologist, has written an elaborate summary essay on t...
From Different Shores is surely a very welcome addition to the growing body of research and serious ...
Attitudes towards specific racial minorities have been central to the history of the United States. ...
Part of the Indiana University series on Blacks in the Diaspora, this book brings together ten essay...
A sociologist, Thornton has written a thorough and balanced demographic account of Native American s...
Dualism, a concept that simply tends to view the world in terms of “either-or” categories rather tha...
Richard Newman, who has previously published a number of bibliographies on various subjects in Afro-...
The editors are a civil rights worker (Cabell) and an academician (Turner) who evidence a longstandi...
George M. Fredrickson, Edgar E. Robinson Professor of United States History at Stanford University, ...
As an historian, Ronald L. Lewis has researched the role of blacks in the coal mining industry, an o...
This scholarly study is a welcome effort to broaden the horizon of what many Americans have come to ...
This volume consists of twelve essays that address the history of black newspapers in the states tha...
It is not often that a person can pick up a book and read it with clarity and understanding, especia...
In 1925 Professor Alain Locke argued in The New Negro that the Negro was moving forward under the c...
A startling look at black separatist movements of the past reveals interesting facts that parallel t...
St. Clair Drake, the recently deceased anthropologist, has written an elaborate summary essay on t...
From Different Shores is surely a very welcome addition to the growing body of research and serious ...
Attitudes towards specific racial minorities have been central to the history of the United States. ...
Part of the Indiana University series on Blacks in the Diaspora, this book brings together ten essay...
A sociologist, Thornton has written a thorough and balanced demographic account of Native American s...
Dualism, a concept that simply tends to view the world in terms of “either-or” categories rather tha...
Richard Newman, who has previously published a number of bibliographies on various subjects in Afro-...
The editors are a civil rights worker (Cabell) and an academician (Turner) who evidence a longstandi...
George M. Fredrickson, Edgar E. Robinson Professor of United States History at Stanford University, ...
As an historian, Ronald L. Lewis has researched the role of blacks in the coal mining industry, an o...