Volume 92, No. 1 Winter 2007 Special Issue: “Women, Slavery, and Historical Research” Guest Editor, Brenda E. Stevenson
|
|
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION – WOMEN, SLAVERY, AND HISTORICAL RESEARCH Brenda E. Stevenson Page 1
“MATTER OUT OF PLACE”: AR’N’T I A WOMAN? BLACK FEMALE SCHOLARS AND THE ACADEMY Deborah Gray White Page 5
AR’N’T I A WOMAN? FEMALE SLAVES IN THE PLANTATION SOUTH – TWENTY YEARS AFTER Darlene Clark Hine Page 13
“IN PRESSING NEED OF CASH”: GENDER, SKILL, AND FAMILY PERSISTENCE IN THE DOMESTIC SLAVE TRADE Daina Remay Berry Page 22
“MAD” ENOUGH TO KILL: ENSLAVED WOMEN, MURDER, AND SOUTHERN COURTS Wilma King Page 37
“FROM MOTIVES OF DELICACY”: SEXUALITY AND MORALITY IN THE NARRATIVES OF SOJOURNER TRUTH AND HARRIET JACOBS Margaret Washington Page 57
THE QUESTION OF SLAVE FEMALE COMMUNITY AND CULTURE IN THE AMERICAN SOUTH: METHODOLOGICAL AND IDEOLOGICAL APPROACHES Brenda E. Stevenson Page 74
SPECIAL REPORT “NEAR ANDERSONVILLE”: AN HISTORICAL NOTE ON CIVIL WAR LEGEND AND REALITY Robert Scott Davis Page 96
IN MEMORIAM CORETTA SCOTT KING AND THE STRUGGLE FOR CIVIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS: AN ENDURING LEGACY Vicki Crawford Page 106
BOOK REVIEWS Afua Cooper, THE HANGING OF ANGÉLIQUE: THE UNTOLD STORY OF CANADIAN SLAVERY AND THE BURNING OF MONTREAL David Austin Page 118
Moon-Ho Jung, COOLIES AND CANE: RACE, LABOR, AND SUGAR IN THE AGE OF EMANCIPATION Carol Huang Page 120
Christopher Robert Reed, BLACK CHICAGO’S FIRST CENTURY, VOLUME I: 1833-1900 Charles Branham Page 122
Wallace D. Best, PASSIONATELY HUMAN, NO LESS DIVINE: RELIGION AND CULTURE IN BLACK CHICAGO, 1915-1952 Barbara L. Green Page 124
Nicholas Patler, JIM CROW AND THE WILSON ADMINISTRATION: PROTESTING FEDERAL SEGREGATION IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY Glen Anthony Harris Page 126
Gerald Horne, BLACK AND BROWN: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION, 1910-1920 Gershom Williams Page 128
Tiffany Ruby Patterson, ZORA NEALE HURSTON AND A HISTORY OF SOUTHERN LIFE Regennia N. Williams Page 129
Christopher Buck, ALAIN LOCKE: FAITH AND PHILOSOPHY M. Anthony Fitchue Page 131
Paul D. Moreno, BLACK AMERICANS AND ORGANIZED LABOR: A NEW HISTORY William P. Jones Page 133
Bobby L. Lovett, THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN TENNESSEE: A NARRATIVE HISTORY Will Sarvis Page 135
Robert O. Self, AMERICAN BABYLON: RACE AND THE STRUGGLE FOR POSTWAR OAKLAND Karl E. Johnson Page 137
James Smethurst, THE BLACK ARTS MOVEMENT: LITERARY NATIONALISM IN THE 1960s AND 1970s Jonathan Fenderson Page 139
Cheryl A. Wall, WORRYING THE LINE: BLACK WOMEN WRITERS, LINEAGE, AND LITERARY TRADITION Geta LeSeur-Brown Page 141
Adam R. Nelson, THE ELUSIVE IDEAL: EQUAL EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY AND THE FEDERAL ROLE IN BOSTON’S PUBLIC SCHOOLS, 1950-1985 Amy Rutenberg Page 143
Martin Kevorkian, COLOR MONITORS: THE BLACK FACE OF TECHNOLOGY IN AMERICA Abdul Alkalimat Page 146
BOOKS RECEIVED Page 148
ANNOUNCEMENTS Page 153
AFRICAN WORLD STUDIES BOOK COLLECTION - DONATIONS Page 154
CARTER G. WOODSON LECTURERS, 2006-2007 Page 157
|
Volume 92, Issue 2 (Spring 2007)
|
"Symposium on African American Historiography"
|
CONTENTS
"THE ART OF GATHERING A CROWD": FLORIDA'S PAT CHAPELLE AND THE ORIGINS OF BLACK-OWNED VAUDEVILLE Larry Eugene Rivers and Canter Brown, Jr. Page 169
THE NEW NEGRO OF THE PACIFIC: HOW AFRICAN AMERICANS FORGED CROSS-RACIAL SOLIDARITY WITH JAPAN, 1917-1922 Yuichiro Onishi Page 191
SYMPOSIUM ON AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORIOGRAPHY
INTRODUCTION - SYMPOSIUM ON AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORIOGRAPHY V.P. Franklin Page 214
DECOLONIZING HISTORY: ARTHUR SCHOMBURG'S AFRODIASPORIC ARCHIVE Adalaine Holton Page 218
EXPLORING A CENTURY OF HISTORICAL SCHOLARSHIP ON BOOKER T. WASHINGTON Pero Gaglo Dagbovie Page 239
THE "LONG MOVEMENT" AS VAMPIRE: TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL FALLACIES IN RECENT BLACK FREEDOM STUDIES Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua and Clarence Lang Page 265
ESSAY REVIEW
ON C.L.R. JAMES AND MARXIST THEORY J.R. Kerr-Ritchie Page 289
BOOK REVIEWS
Nell Irvin Painter, CREATING BLACK AMERICANS: AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND ITS MEANINGS, 1619 TO THE PRESENT Mary Frances Berry Page 293
Eric Burin, SLAVERY AND THE PECULIAR SOLUTION: A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN COLONIZATION SOCIETY Hillary Moss Page 294
Heather Andrea Williams, SELF-TAUGHT: AFRICAN AMERICAN EDUCATION IN SLAVERY AND FREEDOM Adah Ward Randolph Page 296
Davidson M. Douglas, JIM CROW MOVES NORTH: THE BATTLE OVER NORTHERN SCHOOL SEGREGATION, 1865-1954 Katrina M. Sanders-Cassell Page 299
Joan Marie Johnson, SOUTHERN LADIES, NEW WOMEN: RACE, REGION, AND CLUBWOMEN IN SOUTH CAROLINA, 1890-1930 Kathryn M. Silva Page 300
DoVeanna S. Fulton, SPEAKING POWER: BLACK FEMINIST ORALITY IN WOMEN'S NARRATIVES OF SLAVERY Phanuel Ejeguru Page 302
Beverly Soll, I DREAM A WORLD: THE OPERAS OF WILLIAM GRANT STILL Kenneth H. Marcus Page 305
Karl E. Westhauser, Elaine M. Smith and Jennifer A. Fremlin, eds. CREATING COMMUNITY: LIFE AND LEARNING AT MONTGOMERY'S BLACK UNIVERSITY; James C. Cobb, THE BROWN DECISION: JIM CROW AND SOUTHERN IDENTITY Monroe Little Page 307
Simon Hall, PEACE AND FREEDOM: THE CIVIL RIGHTS AND ANTIWAR MOVEMENTS IN THE 1960'S Michael Ezra Page 310
Richard B. Pierce, POLITE PROTEST: THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF RACE IN INDIANAPOLIS, 1920-1970 Ervin James, III Page 312
Matthew J. Countryman, UP SOUTH: CIVIL RIGHTS AND BLACK POWER IN PHILADELPHIA Darryl Mace Page 314
Florence Ridlon, A BLACK PHYSICIAN'S STRUGGLE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS: EDWARD C. MAZIQUE, M.D. Frederick Newsome, M.D. Page 316
Horace Silver, LET'S GET TO THE NITTY GRITTY: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF HORACE SILVER Douglas Henry Daniels Page 318
Robert L. Tignor, W. ARTHUR LEWIS AND THE BIRTH OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS James B. Stewart Page 320
Algernon Austin, ACHIEVING BLACKNESS: RACE, BLACK NATIONALISM, AND AFROCENTRISM IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Mark Christian Page 322
ANNOUNCEMENTS Page 325
AFRICAN WORLD STUDIES BOOK COLLECTION Page 325
|
Volume 92, Issue 3 (Summer 2007)
|
GIVE THEM THEIR DUE: A REASSESSMENT OF AFRICAN AMERICANS AND UNION MILITARY SERVICE IN FLORIDA DURING THE CIVIL WAR Irvin D.S. Winsboro Page 327
VANGUARDS OF THE NEW NEGRO: AFRICAN AMERICAN VETERANS AND POST-WORLD WAR I RACIAL MILITANCY Chad L. Williams Page 347
MUNICIPAL GOLF AND CIVIL RIGHTS IN THE UNITED STATES, 1910-1965 George B. Kirsch Page 371
WAGING “THE GOOD FIGHT”: THE POLITICAL CAREER OF SHIRLEY CHISHOLM, 1953-1982 Julie Gallagher Page 393
ESSAY REVIEWS HOW RACE IS MADE/HOW CHANGE IS MADE Janice E. Hale Page 417
ENOUGH IS NOT ENOUGH V.P. Franklin Page 424
BOOK REVIEWS John Bigelow, JAMAICA IN 1850: OR, THE EFFECTS OF SIXTEEN YEARS OF FREEDOM ON A SLAVE COLONY Annette Palmer Page 431
Jeff Forret, RACE RELATIONS AT THE MARGINS: SLAVES AND POOR WHITES IN THE ANTEBELLUM SOUTHERN COUNTRYSIDE Carmen P. Thompson Page 433
Wilma King, THE ESSENCE OF LIBERTY: FREE BLACK WOMEN DURING THE SLAVE ERA Kali Gross Page 435
James K. Hogue, UNCIVIL WAR: FIVE NEW ORLEANS STREET BATTLES AND THE RISE AND FALL OF RADICAL RECONSTRUCTION Abel A. Bartley Page 437
Hanna Wallinger, PAULINE E. HOPKINS: A LITERARY BIOGRAPHY Sandra E. Bowen Page 439
Thomas Brothers, LOUIS ARMSTRONG’S NEW ORLEANS Raymond Nussbaum Page 441
Penny M. Von Eschen, SATCHMO BLOWS UP THE WORLD: JAZZ AMBASSADORS PLAY THE COLD WAR Melinda R. Weidman Page 443
J. Todd Moye, LET THE PEOPLE DECIDE: BLACK FREEDOM AND WHITE RESISTANCE MOVEMENTS IN SUNFLOWER COUNTY, MISSSISSIPPI, 1945-1986 Tiyi Morris Page 445
Sharon D. Wright Austin, THE TRANSFORMATION OF PLANTATION POLITICS: BLACK POLITICS, CONCENTRATED POVERTY, AND SOCIAL CAPITAL IN THE MISSISSIPPI DELTA; Kim Lacy Rogers, LIFE AND DEATH IN THE DELTA: AFRICAN AMERICAN NARRATIVES OF VIOLENCE, RESILENCE, AND SOCIAL CHANGE Greta de Jong Page 447
Ira Katznelson, WHEN AFFIRMATIVE ACTION WAS WHITE: AN UNTOLD HISTORY OF RACIAL INEQUALITY IN TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICA Stefan Bradley Page 449
Amanda Seligman, BLOCK BY BLOCK: NEIGHBORHOODS AND PUBLIC POLICY ON CHICAGO’S WEST SIDE Max Grinnell Page 451
Marlese Hill and Shirley A. Durr, eds., RACE, WORK, AND FAMILY IN THE LIVES OF AFRICAN AMERICANS Kenvi Phillips Page 453
Kamari Maxine Clarke, MAPPING YORUBA NETWORKS: POWER AND AGENCY IN THE MAKING OF TRANSNATIONAL COMMUNITIES Pamela J. Olúbùnmi Smith Page 455
Felicia M. Miyakawa, FIVE PERCENTER RAP: GOD HOP’S MUSIC, MESSAGE, AND BLACK MUSLIM MISSION Bryan Bracey Page 457
Katheryn Russell-Brown, PROTECTING OUR OWN: RACE, CRIME, AND AFRICAN AMERICANS Louis Wright Page 459
ANNOUNCEMENTS Special Issue: "New Black Power Studies: National, International, and Transnational Perspectives" Volume 92, Issue 4 (Fall 2007) Contents
INTRODUCTION – NEW BLACK POWER STUDIES: NATIONAL, INTERNATIONAL, AND TRANSNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES V.P. Franklin Page 463
THE MAKING OF BLACK INTERNATIONALISTS: SNCC AND AFRICA BEFORE THE LAUNCHING OF BLACK POWER, 1960-1965 Fanon Che Wilkins Page 467
AN AFRICAN-VIETNAMESE AMERICAN: ROBERT S. BROWNE, THE ANTIWAR MOVEMENT, AND THE PERSONAL/POLITICAL DIMENSIONS OF BLACK INTERNATIONALISM Judy Tzu-Chun Wu Page 489
ALL ROADS LED TO MONTREAL: BLACK POWER, THE CARIBBEAN, AND THE BLACK RADICAL TRADITION IN CANADA David Austin Page 513
THE US-PANTHER CONFLICT, EXILE, AND THE BLACK DIASPORA: THE PLIGHT OF LARRY WATANI STINER Larry Watani Stiner and Scot Brown Page 537
JACKANAPES: REFLECTIONS ON THE BLACK PANTHER LEGACY FOR THE HIP HOP GENERATION V.P. Franklin Page 550
NEW BLACK POWER STUDIES: BOOK REVIEWS Judson Jeffries, ed., BLACK POWER IN THE BELLY OF THE BEAST Cedric J. Robinson Page 558
Muhammad Ahmad, WE WILL RETURN IN THE WHIRLWIND: BLACK RADICAL ORGANIZATIONS, 1960-1975 Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua Page 563
Jama Lazerow and Yohuru Williams, eds., IN SEARCH OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON A AREVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT Oscar Williams Page 566
Curtis J. Austin, UP AGAINST THE WALL: VIOLENCE IN THE MAKING AND UNMAKING OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY Bala Baptiste Page 568
Peniel E. Joseph, WAITING ‘TIL THE MIDNIGHT HOUR: A NARRATIVE HISTORY OF BLACK POWER IN AMERICA Felix L. Armfield Page 571
BOOK REVIEWS Karol K. Weaver, MEDICAL REVOLUTIONARIES: THE ENSLAVED HEALERS OF EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SAINT DOMINGUE Phanuel Egejuru Page 573
Marie Jenkins Schwartz, BIRTHING A SLAVE: MOTHERHOOD AND MEDICINE IN THE ANTEBELLUM SOUTH Yulonda Eadie Sano Page 575
Kali N. Gross, COLORED AMAZONS: CRIME, VIOLENCE, AND BLACK WOMEN IN THE CITY OF BROTHERLY LOVE, 1880-1910 Floris Barnett Cashman Page 577
Jacqueline Goldsby, A SPECTACULAR SECRET: LYNCHING IN AMERICAN LIFE AND LITERATURE Karlos K. Hill Page 579
George Hutchinson, IN SEARCH OF NELLA LARSEN: A BIOGRAPHY OF THE COLOR LINE Christy Garrison-Harrison Page 581
Jim C. Harper II, WESTERN-EDUCATED ELITES IN KENYA, 1900-1963: THE AFRICAN AMERICAN FACTOR Keith Dye Page 583
Katrina M. Sanders, “INTELLIGENT AND EFFECTIVE DIRECTION”: THE FISK UNIVERSITY RACE RELATIONS INSTITUTE AND THE STRUGGLE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS, 1944-1969 Felicia Mack Page 585
Gerald Horne, RED SEAS: FERDINAND SMITH AND RADICAL BLACK SAILORS IN THE UNITED STATES AND JAMAICA Edie Ambrose Page 587
Manning Marable, Immanuel Ness, and Joseph Wilson, eds., RACE AND LABOR MATTER IN THE NEW U.S. ECONOMY Lopez Matthews Page 589
J. Philip Thompson, III, DOUBLE TROUBLE: BLACK MAYORS, BLACK COMMUNITIES, AND THE CALL FOR DEEP DEMOCRACY Brian Purnell Page 591
ANNOUNCEMENTS AFRICAN WORLD STUDIES BOOK COLLECTION - DONATIONS Page 595
CARTER G. WOODSON LECTURERS, 2007-2008 Page 596
INDEX TO VOLUME 92
|
| |
|