Volume 95, No. 1 Winter 2010
|
|
“THE NEWEST RELIGIOUS SECT HAS STARTED IN LOS ANGELES”: RACE, CLASS, ETHNICITY, AND THE ORIGINS OF THE PENTECOSTAL MOVEMENT, 1906 – 1913 Marne L. Campbell 1
BLACK VIGILANTISM: THE RISE AND DECLINE OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LYNCH MOB ACTIVITY IN THE MISSISSIPPI AND ARKANSAS DELTAS, 1882-1923 Karlos K. Hill 26
“DETROIT WAS HEAVY”: MODERN JAZZ, BEBOP, AND AFRICAN AMERICAN EXPRESSIVE CULTURE Anthony Macías 44
EVOLVING CONCEPTIONS OF PAN-AFRICAN SCHOLARSHIP: W.E.B. DU BOIS, CARTER G. WOODSON, AND THE “ENCYCLOPEDIA AFRICANA,” 1909-1963 Jonathan Fenderson 71
ESSAY REVIEW AFRICAN AMERICAN EDUCATORS MISCONSTRUED Donna Jordan- Taylor 92
BOOK REVIEWS T. Stephen Whitman, CHALLENGING SLAVERY IN THE CHESEPEAKE: BLACK AND WHITE RESISTANCE TO HUMAN BONDAGE, 1775-1865 Hillary Moss 101
Vanessa D. Dickerson, DARK VICTORIANS Geta LeSeur 103
Lawrence A.Q. Burnley, THE COST OF UNITY: AFRICAN-AMERICAN AGENCY AND EDUCATION IN THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH, 1865-1914 Jeffrey Aaron Snyder 106
Ramla M. Bandele, BLACK STAR: AFRICAN AMERICAN ACTIVISM IN THE INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY J. D. Jackson 108
Nancy Goldstein, JACKIE ORMES: THE FIRST AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMAN CARTOONIST A. Lynn Bolles 110
Gerald Horne, THE END OF EMPIRES: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND INDIA Murali Balaji 112
Derek Charles Catsam, FREEDOM’S MAIN LINE: THE JOURNEY OF RECONCILIATION AND THE FREEDOM RIDES John H. Barnhill 115
David M. Battles, THE HISTORY OF PUBLIC LIBRARY ACCESS FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE SOUTH OR, LEAVING BEHIND THE PLOW Kathryn L. Green 117
Chris Meyers Asch, THE SENATOR AND THE SHARECROPPER: THE FREEDOM STRUGGLES OF JAMES O. EASTLAND AND FANNIE LOU HAMMER Emilye Crosby 118
Anne M. Valk, RADICAL SISTERS: SECOND-WAVE FEMINISM AND BLACK LIBERATION IN WASHINGTON Linda A. Causey 121
Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas, DEEPER SHADES OF PURPLE: WOMANISM IN RELIGION AND SOCIETY Gayle T. Tate 123
Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., IN A SHADE OF BLUE: PRAGMATISM AND THE POLITICS OF BLACK AMERICA Stephanie A. Wilms 126
Maisha T. Fisher, BLACK LITERATE LIVES: HISTORICAL AND CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES Lauren Wells 128
Christopher B. Strain, BURNING FAITH: CHURCH ARSON IN THE AMERICAN SOUTH Barclay Key 130
Derek S. Hyra, THE NEW URBAN RENEWAL: THE ECONOMIC TRANSFORMATION OF HARLEM AND BRONZEVILLE Gokhan Savas 132
ANNOUNCEMENTS BOOKS RECEIVED— 2009 135
CARTER G. WOODSON DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIPS, 2009- 2010 141
Volume 95, No. 2, Spring 2010 Special Issue-“Explorations within the African Diaspora”
INTRODUCTION: EXPLORATIONS WITHIN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA V. P. Franklin 151
RICE, RESISTANCE, AND FORCED TRANSATLANTIC COMMUNITIES: (RE)ENVISIONING THE AFRICAN DIASPORA IN THE LOW COUNTRY GEORGIA, 1750-1800 Karen B. Bell 157
THE LONGUE DURÉE OF AFRICANS IN MEXICO: THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF RACIALIZATION, ACCULTURATION, AND AFRO-MEXICAN SUBJECTIVITY Irene A. Vasquez 183
THE VIRGEN IN THE MIRROR: READING IMAGES OF A BLACK MADONNA THROUGH THE LENS OF AFRO-CUBAN WOMEN’S EXPERIENCES Elizabeth Perez 202
ORGANIZING WITHIN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA: CLAUDE H. A. DENBOW, HOWARD UNIVERSITY, AND THE LEAGUE OF COLOURED PEOPLES Barbara P. Josiah 229
ESSAY REVIEW LYNCHING AND MOB VIOLENCE: CHALLENGING THE DOMINANT NARRATIVES Ashley M. Howard 248
BOOK REVIEWS Patricia Causey Nichols, VOICES OF OUR ANCESTORS: LANGUAGE CONTACT IN EARLY SOUTH CAROLINA Christopher Daniels 257
Randolph Scully, RELIGION AND THE MAKING OF NAT TURNER’S VIRGINIA: BAPTIST COMMUNITY AND CONFLICT, 1740-1840 Quenton L. Keatts 259
Milton C. Sernett, HARRIET TUBMAN: MYTH, MEMORY, AND HISTORY Margaret Washington 260
Shirley Elizabeth Thompson, EXILES AT HOME: THE STRUGGLE TO BECOME AMERICAN IN CREOLE NEW ORLEANS Andrew Bond 262
Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, eds. HARLEM RENAISSANCE LIVES FROM THE AFRICAN AMERICAN NATIONAL BIOGRAPHY A’Lelia Bundles 264
Thomas Dyja, WALTER WHITE: THE DILEMMA OF BLACK IDENTITY IN AMERICA Bala Baptiste 267
Sondra Gordy, FINDING THE LOST YEAR: WHAT HAPPENED WHEN LITTLE ROCK CLOSED ITS PUBLIC SCHOOLS Gail L. Thompson 269
Troy Jackson, BECOMING KING: MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR AND THE MAKING OF A NATIONAL LEADER Jonathan Walton 271
Jonathan Rieder, THE WORD OF THE LORD IS UPON ME: THE RIGHTEOUS PERFORMANCE OF MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. Brian Purnell 273
Frederick Douglass Opie, HOG AND HOMINY: SOUL FOOD FROM AFRICA TO AMERICA Helen Zoe Veit 275
Melanye T. Price, DREAMING BLACKNESS: BLACK NATIONALISM AND AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLIC OPINION Carole Lynn Stewart 278
Robert H. Bates, WHEN THINGS FELL APART: STATE FAILURE IN LATE-CENTURY AFRICA Mary Dillard 280
Dambisa Moyo, DEAD AID: WHY AID IS NOT WORKING AND HOW THERE IS A BETTER WAY FOR AFRICA Beverly Grier 282
Jessica Adams, WOUNDS OF RETURNING: RACE, MEMORY, AND PROPERTY ON THE POSTSLAVERY PLANTATION Andrea A. Burns 285
Peggy Pascoe, WHAT COMES NATURALLY: MISCEGENATION LAW AND THE MAKING OF RACE IN AMERICA Ann S. Holder 287
ANNOUNCEMENTS 290
Volume 95, Nos. 3-4, Summer-Fall 2010 Special Issue-“To Be Heard in Black and White: Historical Perspectives on Black Print Culture”
INTRODUCTION: TO BE HEARD IN BLACK AND WHITE: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON BLACK PRINT CULTURE V. P. Franklin 291
VACCINATING FREEDOM: SMALLPOX PREVENTION AND THE DISCOURSES OF AFRICAN AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP IN ANTEBELLUM PHILDELPHIA Dayle B. DeLancey 296
JOEL AUGUSTUS ROGERS: BLACK INTERNATIONAL JOURNALISM, ARCHIVAL RESEARCH, AND BLACK PRINT CULTURE Thabiti Asukili 322
“I WANT TO BECOME A PART OF HISTORY”: FREEDOM SUMMER, FREEDOM SCHOOLS, AND THE FREEDOM NEWS William Sturkey 348
“BLACK WORLD VIEW”: THE INSTITUTE OF THE BLACK WORLD’S PROMOTION OF PRAGMATIC NATIONALISM, 1969-1974 Derrick E. White 369
“WE ARE ALL PRISONERS”: PRIVILEGING PRISON VOICES IN BLACK PRINT CULTURE Maisha T. Winn 392
ESSAY REVIEWS LITERACY, RHETORIC, AND 19TH CENTURY BLACK PRINT CULTURE Jacqueline Bacon 417
AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN HISTORIANS TELL THEIR STORIES Linda M. Perkins 424
BOOK REVIEWS Frances Smith Foster, ed. LOVE AND MARRIAGE IN EARLY AFRICAN AMERICA Thavolia Glymph 431
Christine Levecq, SLAVERY AND SENTIMENT: THE POLITICS OF FEELING IN BLACK ATLANTIC ANTISLAVERY WRITING, 1770-1850 Sergio Lussana 433
Maurice Jackson, LET THIS VOICE BE HEARD: ANTHONY BENEZET, FATHER OF ATLANTIC ABOLITIONISM Marcus P. Nevius 435
Peter Blanchard, UNDER THE FLAGS OF FREEDOM: SLAVE SOLDIERS AND THE WARS OF INDEPENDENCE IN SPANISH SOUTH AMERICA Jeffrey R. Kerr- Ritchie 437
Barbara Brooks Tomblin, BLUEJACKETS AND CONTRABANDS: AFRICAN AMERICANS THE UNION NAVY Steven J. Ramold 440
Gunja SenGupta, FROM SLAVERY TO POVERTY: THE RACIAL ORIGINS OF WELFARE IN NEW YORK, 1840-1918 James H. Adams 442
Joe M. Richardson and Maxine D. Jones, EDUCATION FOR LIBERATION: THE AMERICAN MISSIONARY AND AFRICAN AMERICANS, 1890 TO THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT Courtney Lyons 444
Samuel Kelton Roberts Jr., INFECTIOUS FEAR: POLITICS, DISEASE, AND THE HEALTH EFFECTS OF SEGREGATION Julie Sze 446
Susan D. Pennybacker, FROM SCOTTSBORO TO MUNICH: RACE AND POLITICAL CULTURE IN 1930s BRITAIN Charles H. Ford 449
Andrew J. Diamond, MEAN STREETS: CHICAGO YOUTHS AND THE EVERYDAY STRUGGLE FOR EMPOWERMENT IN THE MULTIRACIAL CITY, 1908-1969 Joan Marshall Wesley 451
Lisa Levenstein, A MOVEMENT WITHOUT MARCHES: AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN AND THE POLITICS OF POVERTY IN POSTWAR PHILADELPHIA Françoise N. Hamlin 453
Lorna Rivera, LABORING TO LEARN: WOMEN’S LITERACY AND POVERTY IN THE POST-WELFARE ERA Elizabeth Bridges 456
Jeffrey E. Anderson, VOODOO, HOODOO, AND CONJURE: A HANDBOOK David Childs 457
Michael Nash, ISLAM AMONG URBAN BLACKS: MUSLIMS IN NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, A SOCIAL HISTORY Jamie J. Wilson 460
Mary E. McGann, ed., LET IT SHINE! THE EMERGENCE OF AFRICAN AMERICAN CATHOLIC WORSHIP Uche Egemonye 462
Wendell E. Pritchett, ROBERT CLIFTON WEAVER AND THE AMERICAN CITY: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF AN URBAN REFORMER Zebulon Vance Miletsky 465
Alton Hornsby, Jr., BLACK POWER IN DIXIE: A POLITICAL HISTORY OF AFRICAN AMERICANS IN ATLANTA Christopher M. Tinson 467
David C. Ogden and Joel Nathan Rosen, eds., RECONSTRUCTING FAME: SPORT, RACE, AND EVOLVING REPUTATIONS Robert Anthony Bennett III 469
David R. Roediger, HOW RACE SURVIVED IN U. S. HISTORY: FROM SETTLEMENT AND SLAVERY TO THE OBAMA PHENOMENON Gerald Horne 471
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, SOMETHING TORN AND NEW: AN AFRICAN RENAISSANCE Babacar M’ Baye 473
ANNOUNCEMENTS 476
INDEX TO VOLUME 95 479
|
|