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Let nobody turn us around : voices of resistance, ... Read More

Electronic resources

http://books.google.com/books?isbn=9780742560567 - Additional Information at Google Books

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  • 1 of 1 copy available at Berklee College of Music.

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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Valencia Main Library E184.6 .L48 2009 37684001092408 Valencia Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Copy hold / Volume hold Available -

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780742560567
  • ISBN: 0742560562
  • ISBN: 9780742560574
  • ISBN: 0742560570
  • Physical Description: xxix, 676 pages ; 23 cm
  • Edition: Second edition.
  • Publisher: Lanham, Maryland ; Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., [2009]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note:
Preface to the first edition -- Preface to the ... Read More
Reconstruction and reaction : the aftermath of ... Read More
From plantation to ghetto : the great migration, ... Read More
We shall overcome : the second reconstruction, ... Read More
The future in the present : contemporary ... Read More
Summary, etc.:
"This anthology of black writers traces the ... Read More
Subject: African Americans > History > Sources.
African Americans > Civil rights > History > Sources.
African Americans > Social conditions > Sources.
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020 . ‡a0742560562 ‡q(cloth ; ‡qalk. paper)
020 . ‡a9780742560574 ‡q(pbk. ; ‡qalk. paper)
020 . ‡a0742560570 ‡q(pbk. ; ‡qalk. paper)
035 . ‡a(OCoLC)309835428 ‡z(OCoLC)297206886 ‡z(OCoLC)297206887 ‡z(OCoLC)1079941186 ‡z(OCoLC)1083408197 ‡z(OCoLC)1085395744 ‡z(OCoLC)1200987690 ‡z(OCoLC)1201863358
05000. ‡aE184.6 ‡b.L48 2009
08200. ‡a973/.0496073 ‡222
090 . ‡aE184.6 ‡b.L48 2009
049 . ‡aBKCA
24500. ‡aLet nobody turn us around : ‡bvoices of resistance, reform, and renewal ; an African American anthology / ‡ceditors Manning Marable, Leith Mullings.
250 . ‡aSecond edition.
264 1. ‡aLanham, Maryland ; ‡aBoulder, Colorado ; ‡aNew York ; ‡aOxford : ‡bRowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., ‡c[2009]
264 4. ‡c©2009
300 . ‡axxix, 676 pages ; ‡c23 cm
336 . ‡atext ‡btxt ‡2rdacontent
337 . ‡aunmediated ‡bn ‡2rdamedia
338 . ‡avolume ‡bnc ‡2rdacarrier
504 . ‡aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
5201 . ‡a"This anthology of black writers traces the evolution of African-American perspectives throughout American history, from the early years of slavery to the end of the 20th century. The essays, manifestos, interviews, and documents assembled here, contextualized with critical commentaries from Marable and Mullings, introduce the reader to the character and important controversies of each period of black history." "The selections represent a broad spectrum of ideology. Conservative, radical, nationalistic, and integrationist approaches can be found in almost every period, yet there have been striking shifts in the evolution of social thought and activism. The editors judiciously illustrate how both continuity and change affected the African-American community in terms of its internal divisions, class structure, migration, social problems, leadership, and protest movements. They also show how gender, spirituality, literature, music, and connections to Africa and the Caribbean played a prominent role in black life and history."-- ‡cfrom jacket
50500. ‡tPreface to the first edition -- ‡tPreface to the second edition -- ‡tIntroduction: Resistance, reform, and renewal in the black experience -- ‡tFoundations : slavery and abolition, 1768-1867. ‡t"On being brought from Africa to America" Equiano," / ‡rPhyllis Wheatley, 1768 -- ‡t"The interesting narrative of the life of Olaudah Equiano," / ‡rOlaudah Equiano, 1789 -- ‡t"Thus doth Ethiopia stretch forth her hand from slavery, to freedom and equality" / ‡rPrince Hall, 1797 -- ‡tThe founding of the African Methodist Episcopal Church / ‡rRichard Allen, 1816 -- ‡tDavid Walker's "Appeal", 1829-1830 -- ‡tThe statement of Nat Turner, 1831 -- ‡tSlaves are prohibited to read and write by law -- ‡t"What if I am a woman?" / ‡rMaria W. Stewart, 1833 -- ‡tA slave denied the rights to marry / ‡rletter of Milo Thompson, slave, 1834 -- ‡tThe selling of slaves / ‡radvertisement, 1835 -- ‡tSolomon Northrup describes a New Orleans slave auction, 1841 -- ‡tCinque and the Amistad revolt, 1841 -- ‡t"Let your motto be resistance!" / ‡rHenry Highland Garnet, 1843 -- ‡t"Slavery as it is," / ‡rWilliam Wells Brown, 1847 -- ‡t"A'n't I a woman?" / ‡rSojourner Truth, 1851 -- ‡t"A plea for emigration, or Notes of Canada West" / ‡rMary Ann Shadd Cary, 1852 -- ‡tA black nationalist Manifesto / ‡rMartin R. Delany, 1852 -- ‡t"What to the slave is the Fourth of July?" / ‡rFrederick Douglass, 1852 -- ‡t"No rights that a white man is bound to respect": the Dred Scott Case and its aftermath -- ‡t"Whenever the colored man is elevated, it will be by his own exertions" / ‡rJohn S. Rock, 1858 -- ‡tThe spirituals: "Go down, Moses" and "Didn't my Lord deliver Daniel."
50580. ‡tReconstruction and reaction : the aftermath of slavery and the dawn of segregation, 1861-1915. ‡t"What the black man wants" / ‡rFrederick Douglass, 1865 -- ‡tHenry McNeal Turner, Black Christian Nationalist -- ‡tBlack urban workers during Reconstruction: ‡tAnonymous document on the National Colored Labor Convention, 1869 ; ‡tNew York Tribune article on African-American workers, 1870 -- ‡t"Labor and capital are in deadly conflict" / ‡rT. Thomas Fortune, 1886 -- ‡tEdward Wilmot Blyden and the African diaspora -- ‡t"The Democratic idea is humanity" / ‡rAlexander Crummell, 1888 -- ‡t"A voice from the South" / ‡rAnna Julia Cooper, 1892 -- ‡tThe National Association of Colored Women: Mary Church Terrell and Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin -- ‡t"I know why the caged bird sings" / ‡rPaul Laurence Dunbar -- ‡tBooker T. Washington and the politics of accomodation: "Atlanta Exposition address" ; ‡t"My view of segregation laws" -- ‡tWilliam Monroe Trotter and the Boston Guardian -- ‡tRace and the Southern worker: ‡t"A Negro woman speaks" ; ‡tThe race question a class question" ; ‡t"Negro workers!" -- ‡tIda B. Wells-Barnett, crusader for justice -- ‡tWilliam Edward Burghardt Du Bois: ‡tExcerpts from "The conservation of races" ; ‡tExcerpts from The souls of black folk -- ‡tThe Niagara movement, 1905 -- ‡tHubert Henry Harrison, black revolutionary nationalist.
50580. ‡tFrom plantation to ghetto : the great migration, Harlem Renaissance, and World War, 1915-1954. ‡tBlack conflict over World War I: ‡tW.E.B. Du Bois, "Close ranks" ; ‡tHubert H. Harrison, "The descent of Du Bois" ; ‡tW.E.B. Du Bois, "Returning soldiers" -- ‡t"If we must die" / ‡rClaude McKay, 1919 -- ‡tBlack Bolsheviks: Cyril V. Briggs and Claude McKay: ‡t"What the African Blood Brotherhood stands for" ; ‡t"Soviet Russia and the Negro" -- ‡tMarcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association: ‡t"Declaration of rights of the Negro Peoples of the world" ; ‡t"An appeal to the conscience of the black race to see itself" -- ‡t"Women as leaders / ‡rAmy Euphemia Jacques Garvey, 1925 -- ‡tLangston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance: ‡t"The Negro artist and the racial mountain" ; ‡t"My America" ; ‡tPoems -- ‡t"The Negro woman and the ballot" / ‡rAlice Moore Dunbar-Nelson, 1927 -- ‡tJames Weldon Johnson and Harlem in the 1920s: ‡t"Harlem: the culture capital" -- ‡tBlack workers in the Great Depression -- ‡tThe Scottsboro Trials, 1930s -- ‡t"You cannot kill the working class" / ‡rAngelo Herndon, 1933: ‡t"Speech to the jury, January 17, 1933" ; ‡tExcerpt from "You cannot kill the working class -- ‡tHosea Hudson, black Communist activist -- ‡t"Breaking the bars to brotherhood" / ‡rMary McLeod Bethune, 1935 -- ‡tAdam Clayton Powell, Jr., and the fight for black employment in Harlem -- ‡tBlack women workers during the Great Depression: ‡tElaine Ellis, "Women of the cotton fields" ; ‡tNaomi Ward, "I am a domestic" -- ‡tSouthern Negro Youth Conference, 1939 -- ‡tA. Philip Randolph and the Negro March on Washington Movement, 1941 -- ‡tCharles Hamilton Houston and the war effort among African Americans, 1944 -- ‡t"An end to the neglect of the problems of the Negro woman!" / ‡rClaudia Jones, 1949 -- ‡t"The Negro artist looks ahead" / ‡rPaul Robeson, 1951 -- ‡tThurgood Marshall: The Brown decision and the struggle for school desegregation.
50580. ‡tWe shall overcome : the second reconstruction, 1954-1975. ‡tRosa PArks, Jo Ann Robinson, and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-1956. ‡tJo Ann Robinson's letter to Mayor of Montgomery ; ‡tInterview with Rosa Parks ; ‡tExcerpts from Jo Ann Robinson's account of the boycott -- ‡tRoy Wilkins and the NAACP -- ‡tThe Southern Christian Leadership Conference, 1957 -- ‡tStudent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the sit-in movement, 1960 -- ‡tFreedom songs, 1960s: ‡t"We shall overcome" ; ‡t"Ain't gonna let nobody turn me 'round" -- ‡t"We need group-centered leadership" / ‡rElla Baker -- ‡tMartin Luther King, Jr., and nonviolence: ‡tExcerpt from "Nonviolence and racial justice," 1957 ; ‡t"A have a dream," 1963 -- ‡tThe revolution is at hand" / ‡rJohn R. Lewis, 1963 -- ‡tThe salvation of American Negroes lies in Socialism" / ‡rW.E.B. Du Bois -- ‡t"The special plight and the role of black women" / ‡rFannie Lou Hammer -- ‡t"SNCC position paper: Women in the Movement," 1964 -- ‡tElijah Muhammad and the Nation of Islam -- ‡tMalcom X and Revolutionary Black Nationalism: ‡t"The ballot or the bullet" ; ‡tStatement of the Organization of Afro-American Unity" -- ‡tBlack power: ‡tStokely Carmichael, "What we want" ; ‡tSNCC, "Position paper on Black Power" ; ‡tBayard Rustin, "'Black Power' and coalition politics" -- ‡t"CORE endorses Black Power" / ‡rFloyd McKissick, 1967 -- ‡t"To atone for our sins and errors in Vietnam" / ‡rMartin Luther King, Jr., 1967 -- ‡tHuey P. Newton and the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense -- ‡t"The people have to have the power" / ‡rFred Hampton -- ‡t"I am a revolutionary black woman" / ‡rAngela Y. Davis, 1970 -- ‡t"Our thing is DRUM!" the League of Revolutionary Black Workers -- ‡tAttica: "The fury of those who are oppressed," 1971 -- ‡tThe National Black political Convention, Gary, Indiana, March 1972 -- ‡t"There is no revolution without the people" / ‡rAmiri Baraka, 1972: ‡t"The Pan-African Party and the Black Nation" ; ‡tPoem -- ‡t"My sight is gone but my vision remains" / ‡rMenry Winston: ‡t"On returning to the struggle" ; ‡t"A letter to my brothers and sisters."
50580. ‡tThe future in the present : contemporary African-American thought, 1975-present. ‡tBlack feminisms: The Combahee River Collective Statement, 1977 -- ‡t"Women in prison: how we are" / ‡rAssata Shakur, 1978 -- ‡tIt's our turn" / ‡rHarold Washington, 1983 -- ‡t"I am your sister" / ‡rAudre Lorde, 1984 -- ‡t"Shaping feminist theory" / ‡rbell hooks, 1984 -- ‡tThe movement against Apartheid: Jesse Jackson and Randall Robinson. ‡tJesse Jackson: "Don't adjust to Apartheid" ; ‡t"State of the U.S. Anti-Apartheid movement: an interview with Randall Robinson" -- ‡t"Keep hope alive" / ‡rJesse Jackson, 1988 -- ‡tAfrocentricity" / ‡rMolefi Asante -- ‡tThe Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas controversy, 1991. ‡t"African-American women in defense of ourselves" ; ‡tJune Jordan, "Can I get a witness?" -- ‡t"Race matters" / ‡rCornel West, 1991 -- ‡t"Black anti-Semitism" / ‡rHenry Louis Gates, Jr., 1992 -- ‡t"Crime-- causes and cures" / ‡rJarvis Tyner, 1994 -- ‡tLouis Farrakhan: The million man march, 1995 -- ‡t"A voice from death row" / ‡rMumia Abu-Jamal -- ‡t"Let justice roll down like waters" / ‡rAfrican-American Prisoners in Sing Sing, 1998. ‡t"Statement by Sing Sing Prisoners" ; ‡tMichael J. Love, "The prison-industrial complex: an investment in failure" ; ‡tWillis L. Steele, Jr. "River Hudson" -- ‡tBlack Radical Congress, 1998: ‡t"Principles of unity" ; ‡tThe struggle continues: setting a black liberation agenda for the 21st century" ; ‡tThe freedom agenda" -- ‡t2000 Presidential election. ‡t"Letter to Governor Bush from Chairperson Mary Frances Berry," 2001 -- ‡tHip-hop activism. ‡t"What we want" statement from Hip-Hop Action Summit Network, 2001 ; ‡t"Tookie protocol for peace," 2004 -- ‡tWorld Conference Against Racism-- Durban, South Africa -- ‡tAfrican Americans respond to terrorism and war. ‡t"Barbara Lee's stand," 2001 ; ‡t10 points from Iraq Veterans agianst the War, 2001 -- ‡tThe Cosby vs. Dyson Debate, 2004-2005. ‡tSummary of "Dr. Bill Cosby speaks at the 50th commemoration of the Brown vs. Tokepa Board of Education Supreme Court Decision" ; ‡tExcerpt from "Is Bill Cosby right?: or has the black middle class lost its mind?" -- ‡tU.S. Senate Resolution against lynching, 2005 -- ‡tHurricane Katrina Crisis, 2005: ‡t"This is criminal": Malik Rahim reports from New Orleans, 2005 -- ‡tBarack Obama's Presidential campaign, 2007-2008: ‡tExcerpts from National Democratic Party Convention speech, 2004 ; ‡t"A more perfect union," 2008.
650 0. ‡aAfrican Americans ‡xHistory ‡vSources.
650 0. ‡aAfrican Americans ‡xCivil rights ‡xHistory ‡vSources.
650 0. ‡aAfrican Americans ‡xSocial conditions ‡vSources.
7001 . ‡aMarable, Manning, ‡d1950-2011, ‡4edt
7001 . ‡aMullings, Leith, ‡eeditor.
77608. ‡iOnline version: ‡tLet nobody turn us around. ‡b2nd ed. ‡dLanham : Rowman & Littlefield, ©2009 ‡w(OCoLC)653377772
85642. ‡uhttp://books.google.com/books?isbn=9780742560567 ‡zAdditional Information at Google Books
994 . ‡aC0 ‡bBKC
905 . ‡utlin2@berklee.edu
901 . ‡a180317 ‡b ‡c180317 ‡tbiblio ‡soclc

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