Introduction |
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ix | |
PART 1: GENDER, KINSHIP, AND COMMUNITY |
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1 | (280) |
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Chapter One: Women and Gender |
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3 | (124) |
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one Selected Speeches, Sojourner Truth |
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5 | (4) |
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two The Jealous Mistress, Harriet Ann Jacobs |
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9 | (6) |
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three Womanhood: A Vital Element in the Regeneration and Progress of a Race, Anna Julia Cooper |
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15 | (17) |
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four The Damnation of Women, W.E.B. Du Bois |
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32 | (15) |
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five Women's Most Serious Problem, Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson |
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47 | (5) |
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six On Being Young-A Woman-and Colored, Marita Bonner |
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52 | (6) |
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seven A Century of Progress of Negro Women, Mary McLeod Bethune |
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58 | (5) |
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eight To All Black Women, from All Black Men, Eldridge Cleaver |
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63 | (6) |
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nine Double Jeopardy: To Be Black and Female, Frances Beat |
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69 | (10) |
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ten Feminism and Black Liberation, Audre Lorde |
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79 | (6) |
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eleven The Approaching Obsolescence of Housework, Angela Davis |
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85 | (18) |
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twelve Statement of Anita Hill to the Senate Judiciary Committee, October 11, 1991, Anita Hill |
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103 | (7) |
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thirteen Establishing g Black Feminism, Barbara Smith |
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110 | (6) |
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fourteen Toward a Black Feminist Liberation Agenda: Race Gender and Violence, Kristen Clarke |
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116 | (11) |
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Chapter Two: Kinship and Community |
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127 | (62) |
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one Kidnappers! Lewis Williamson |
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129 | (3) |
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two To His Son, 2/2/1850, William J. Walker |
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132 | (3) |
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three Childhood, Harriet Jacobs |
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135 | (9) |
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four For My People, Margaret Walker |
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144 | (3) |
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five Untitled Excerpt from Writings About her Childhood, Ella Baker |
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147 | (3) |
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six Notes of a Native Son, James Baldwin |
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150 | (12) |
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seven Playing Hardball, Henry Louis Gates |
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162 | (8) |
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eight From a Black Woman to a Black Man, Maya Angelou |
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170 | (3) |
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nine In My Father's House, Manning Marable |
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173 | (8) |
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ten Kwanzaa and the Ethics of Sharing: Forging Our Future in a New Era, Maulana Karenga |
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181 | (8) |
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Chapter Three, Imagining the Black World |
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189 | (92) |
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one Poems, Phillis Wheatley |
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191 | (3) |
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two Argument for Colonization, John Russwurm |
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194 | (4) |
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three Ethiopia, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper |
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198 | (3) |
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four West India Emancipation, Frederick Douglas |
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201 | (18) |
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five The American Negro and His Fatherland, Henry McNeal Turner |
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219 | (6) |
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six Declaration of the Rights of Negro Peoples of the World, Marcus Garvey |
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225 | (9) |
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seven Heritage, Countee Cullen |
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234 | (5) |
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eight Writings, Paul Robeson |
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239 | (12) |
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nine Letters from Abroad, Malcolm X |
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251 | (5) |
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ten Selected Essays, Audre Lorde |
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256 | (14) |
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eleven "The Continuity of Struggle", Assata Shakur |
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270 | (11) |
PART 2: POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, AND SOCIAL JUSTICE |
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281 | (294) |
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Chapter Four: Political Leadership and Social Protest |
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283 | (100) |
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one Petitions: Petition of the Africans, Living in Boston, Felix; Anonymous Appeal to William, Earl of Dartmouth; and The Earliest Extant Negro Petition to Congress, Jupiter Nicholson, Jacob Nicholson, Joe Albert, and Thomas Pritchet |
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285 | (9) |
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two Letter to Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Banneker |
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294 | (5) |
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three Oration on the Abolition of the Slave Trade, Peter Williams Jr. |
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299 | (8) |
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four Editorial from the First Edition of Freedom's Journal, Rev. Samuel Cornish and John Russwurm |
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307 | (5) |
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five Men of Color, To Arms! Frederick Douglass |
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312 | (4) |
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six Speech to the Georgia Legislature, Henry McNeal Turner |
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316 | (5) |
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seven Letter of Nimrod Rowley to Abraham Lincoln, August 1864 |
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321 | (3) |
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eight An Address Delivered at the Centennial Anniversary of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper |
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324 | (5) |
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nine Letter to the Editor of the Birmingham Age-Herald, Booker T. Washington |
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329 | (3) |
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ten Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others, W.E.B. Du Bois |
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332 | (11) |
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eleven Selected Poems, Claude McKay |
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343 | (4) |
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twelve Letter from a Birmingham Jail, Martin Luther King Jr. |
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347 | (16) |
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thirteen From Protest to Politics, Bayard Rustin |
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363 | (5) |
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fourteen The Business of America is War, and It Is Time for a Change, Shirley Chisholm |
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368 | (4) |
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fifteen The Struggle Continues, Jesse Jackson |
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372 | (11) |
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Chapter Five: in Pursuit of Justice |
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383 | (66) |
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one Speech on the Fugitive Slave Bill, Samuel Rinngold Ward |
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385 | (5) |
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two Hannah Johnson to Abraham Lincoln, July 31, 1863 |
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390 | (3) |
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three Sojourner Truth: Extracts from Her Lecture on Capital Punishment |
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393 | (3) |
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four Lynch Law in All Its Phases, Ida B. Wells-Barnett |
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396 | (16) |
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five Songs of the Prison Plantation |
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412 | (6) |
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six The Lynching, Claude McKay |
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418 | (2) |
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420 | (4) |
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eight To Praise Our Bridges, Fannie Lou Hamer |
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424 | (4) |
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nine The Resistant Spirit, Robert Williams |
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428 | (4) |
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ten Life In Prison, George Jackson |
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432 | (9) |
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eleven The Legacy of George Jackson, Angela Davis |
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441 | (4) |
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twelve B-Block Days and Nightmares, Mumia Abu-Jamal |
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445 | (4) |
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Chapter Six: Work, Labor, and Economic Development |
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449 | (54) |
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451 | (5) |
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two Industrial Education for the Negro, Thomas McCants Stewart |
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456 | (3) |
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three Harvest Song, Jean Toomey |
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459 | (3) |
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four Song to a Negro Wash-woman, Langston Hughes |
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462 | (3) |
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five Why Should We March?, A. Philip Randolph |
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465 | (5) |
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six Black Boy: A Record of Childhood and Youth, Richard Wright |
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470 | (12) |
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seven A Giant Step Toward Unity, William Simons |
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482 | (5) |
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eight All God's Dangers, Ned Cobb |
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487 | (16) |
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Chapter Seven: A Vision of Democracy |
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503 | (72) |
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one America, James Monroe Whitfield |
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505 | (6) |
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two On American "Democracy" and the Negro, Robert Purvis |
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511 | (4) |
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three Negro Patriotism and Devotion, Kelly Miller |
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515 | (7) |
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four Our Democracy and the Ballot, James Weldon Johnson |
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522 | (8) |
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five The Shame of America, Archibald Grimké |
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530 | (16) |
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six The Kind of Democracy the Negro Race Expects, William Pickens |
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546 | (5) |
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seven Selected Poems, Langston Hughes |
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551 | (8) |
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eight I, Too, Am American, Paul Robeson |
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559 | (4) |
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nine The American Dream and the American Negro, James Baldwin |
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563 | (6) |
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ten Who Then Will Speak for the Common Good?, Barbara Jordan |
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569 | (6) |
PART 3: CULTURE, FAITH, AND CELEBRATION |
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575 | (148) |
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Chapter Eight: Popular Culture |
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577 | (64) |
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579 | (4) |
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two The Prize Fighter, editorial in Crisis |
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583 | (3) |
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three The Negro Spirituals, Alain Locke |
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586 | (11) |
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four The Dilemma of the Negro Author, James Weldon Johnson |
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597 | (8) |
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five It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing), Duke Ellington |
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605 | (3) |
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six High Tide in Harlem, Richard Wright |
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608 | (6) |
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seven The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, Gil Scott-Heron |
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614 | (3) |
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eight Where Are the Films About Real Black Men and Women?, Ellen Holly |
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617 | (5) |
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nine The Signifying Monkey, Henry Louis Gates Jr. |
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622 | (4) |
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ten What America Would Be Like Without Blacks, Ralph Ellison |
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626 | (7) |
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eleven 0. J. Simpson and Our Trial by Fire, Michael Eric Dyson |
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633 | (8) |
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Chapter Nine: Faith and Spirituality |
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641 | (82) |
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643 | (5) |
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two Spiritual Song, Richard Allen |
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648 | (4) |
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three A Thanksgiving Sermon, Absalom Jones |
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652 | (8) |
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four Excerpt from Clotel, William Wells Brown |
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660 | (11) |
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five Excerpt from A Brand Plucked from the Fire, Julia A. Foote |
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671 | (6) |
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six An Antebellum Sermon, Paul Laurence Dunbar |
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677 | (4) |
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seven Writings, Fenton Johnson |
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681 | (6) |
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eight Go Down Death, James Weldon Johnson |
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687 | (4) |
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nine Faith Hasn't Got No Eyes, Zora Neale Hurston |
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691 | (4) |
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ten Salvation, Langston Hughes |
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695 | (3) |
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eleven The Most Durable Power, Martin Luther King Jr. |
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698 | (3) |
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twelve Black Theology and Black Power, James H. Cone |
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701 | (8) |
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thirteen The Black Church and Socialist Politics, Cornel West |
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709 | (7) |
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fourteen A Torchlight for America, Louis Farrakhan |
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716 | (7) |
Index |
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723 | (6) |
Acknowledgments |
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729 | |