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The ways in which the African American community learned to be
proficient readers and writers during the 19th century were
diverse, however, the greatest impact on literacy acquisition came
from family and community efforts. African American arts, churches,
benevolent societies, newspapers, literacy societies, and formal
and informal schools supported literacy growth, and literacy growth
in turn gave rise to national and international African American
literacy traditions. The underlying motivations that gave shape to
the nature of their literacy behaviors and events within family and
community contexts and within national and global context are
examined in detail here. The beginnings of African American
literacy traditions would have failed had there not been intrinsic
motivations, opportunities, and a need to use all of the language
arts, reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing to
maintain and protect what mattered most to them as a people. The
institutionalization of these traditions into family and community
rituals, including songs, prayers, letters, story telling, and the
like gave a visibility to the African American in ways no other
cultural knowledge could. Belt-Beyan traces the development of
these literacy traditions, noting the parallel progression and
transformation of Africans into African Americans, slaves into
freepersons, and noncitizens into citizens.
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