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African American History: The Development of a People provides
students with diverse, concise essays that explore the experiences,
traditions, and culture of African Americans in the United States
from the nation's early years to today. The readings center on the
collective and individual experiences of African Americans and
explore the cultural and historical contexts in which they live
their lives. Part I of the anthology features readings that
correspond to America's Antebellum Era. The selections speak to
slavery, politics, family life, survival, and indomitable will.
Part II explores issues of the post-Civil War and Reconstruction
eras, including reimagining life after slavery, Jim Crow, the Civil
Rights Movement, boycotts, the emergence of black power, and more.
The final part contains readings from influential figures and
political bodies-including former presidents Abraham Lincoln and
Barack Obama, civil rights leader Booker T. Washington, civil
rights activist W.E.B. DuBois, and Supreme Court decisions-that
demonstrate how African Americans have challenged and continue to
challenge political and social systems through activism. A powerful
and engaging anthology, African American History is well-suited for
undergraduate and graduate courses in U.S. history, African
American history, urban sociology, and black political thought.
This book examines the many ways in which the New Deal revived
Texas's economic structure after the 1929 collapse. Ronald Goodwin
analyzes how Franklin Roosevelt's initiative, and in particular,
the Work Progress Administration, remedied rampant unemployment and
homelessness in twentieth-century Texas.
Buoyed by the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s,
historians began reevaluating previously held beliefs of American
slavery. Under particular scrutiny was the belief in slavery's
paternalistic benevolence. Remembering the Days of Sorrow is not
another attempt to revise this outdated perception justifying
slavery. Others have already done that. As part of the New Deal's
national agenda of work relief programs, the Slave Narratives
project provided employment while simultaneously preserving the
memories of former slaves throughout the country. Remembering the
Days of Sorrow allows the voices of Texas's former slaves to
resonate to a new generation as they remembered what it was like to
suffer under the yoke of slavery as well as the yoke of old age and
poverty in the Great Depression of the 1930s.
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209
Mara Torres Gonzalez
Hardcover
R1,760
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