Afro-American History: Primary Sources (shorter edition)
Item
Title
Afro-American History: Primary Sources (shorter edition)
This edition
"Afro-American History: Primary Sources." Ed. Thomas R. Frazier. Shorter Edition. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1971. viii+280 pp.
Other editions, reprints, and translations
"Afro-American History: Primary Sources." Ed. Thomas R. Frazier. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1970.
"Afro-American History: Primary Sources." Ed. Thomas R. Frazier. 2nd ed. Chicago: Dorsey, 1988.
"Readings in African-American History." Ed. Thomas R. Frazier. 3rd ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning, 2001.
Online access
Table of contents
● Thomas R. Frazier / Preface
Part 1: Africa and the Slave Trade
● Venture Smith / Taken from the Guinea Coast as a Child [from "A Narrative of the Life of Venture"]
● Olaudah Equiano / The Horrors of the Middle Passage [from "The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 2: The Afro-American before 1800
● Absalom Jones and Richard Allen / Blacks Serve the City in a Time of Crisis [from "A Narrative of the Proceedings of the Black People during the Late Awful Calamity in Philadelphia"]
● Several persons / A Plea for Federal Protection for Manumitted Slaves of the South [from "Petition of Four Free Blacks to the United States House of Representatives, 1797"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 3: Slavery in the Nineteenth Century
● Nat Turner / Rebellion [from "The Confessions of Nat Turner"]
● James W. C. Pennington / The Escape of a Fugitive Slave [from "The Fugitive Blacksmith"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 4: The Free Black Community, 1800-1860
● Henry Highland Garnet / The Slave Must Throw Off the Slaveholder [from "Address to a Convention in Buffalo, 1843"]
● John S. Rock / Black Pride [from "Address to a Meeting in Boston, 1858"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 5: The Civil War and Reconstruction
● Frederick Douglass / Free the Slaves, Then Leave Them Alone [from "Address to the Emancipation League in Boston, 1862"]
● Blanche K. Bruce / Discrimination in Mississippi Elections [from "Address to the United States Senate, 1876"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 6: The Legal Segregation of Free People
● Anon. / The Areas of Racial Discrimination [from "Report of the Committee on Grievances at the State Convention of Colored Men of Texas, 1883"]
● Anon. / Peonage in the South [from "The Life Story of a Negro Peon"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 7: The Organization of Protest
● Booker T. Washington / Education Before Equality [from "The Atlanta Exposition Address, 1893"]
● W. E. B. Du Bois / Equality and Education [from "Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others"]
● NAACP / The NAACP Program for Change [from "The Task for the Future--A Program for 1919"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 8: The Great Migration Brings a New Mood
● Several persons / Why Blacks Chose to Leave the South [from Letters of Negro Migrants of 1916-1918]
● Marcus Garvey / Free Africa for Africans [from "The Negro's Greatest Enemy"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 9: The Depression: Unemployment and Radicalism
● Robert C. Weaver / A New Deal for the Black Man [from "The New Deal and the Negro"]
● Angelo Herndon / A Black Workingman in the Communist Party [from "You Cannot Kill the Working Class"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 10: The Second World War and the Double V
● Walter White / Battle on the Home Front [from "What Caused the Detroit Riots?"]
● Grant Reynolds / The Attitude of the Black Fighting Man [from "What the Negro Thinks of This War"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 11: School Desegregation
● Daisy Bates / Little Rock Prepares for Desegregation [from "Governor Faubus Rouses the Mob"]
● James Meredith / Meredith Cracks Ole Miss [from "I'll Know Victory or Defeat"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 12: The Nonviolent Civil Rights Movement
● Martin Luther King, Jr. / The Philosophy of Nonviolent Coercion [from "Letter from Birmingham Jail"]
● Thomas Gaither / Jail, Not Bail [from "Jailed-In"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 13: The Militant Black Liberation Movement
● Julius Lester / The Singing Is Over [from "The Angry Children of Malcolm X"]
● Haryou-Act / Conditions in the Urban Ghetto [from "Cries of Harlem"]
● Malcolm X / Liberation by Any Means Necessary [from "Address to a Meeting in New York, 1964"]
● Black Panther Party / All Power to the People -- Black Power to Black People [from "What We Want, What We Believe"
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part I4: Black Power Explained
● Stokely Carmichael / The Meaning of Black Power [from "Toward Black Liberation"]
● Whitney Young, Jr. / The Urban League Interprets Black Power [from "Address to a CORE Convention in Columbus, Ohio, 1968"]
● James Forman / The Black Manifesto [from "Address to the National Black Economic Development Conference, 1969"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
General Reading Suggestions
Part 1: Africa and the Slave Trade
● Venture Smith / Taken from the Guinea Coast as a Child [from "A Narrative of the Life of Venture"]
● Olaudah Equiano / The Horrors of the Middle Passage [from "The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 2: The Afro-American before 1800
● Absalom Jones and Richard Allen / Blacks Serve the City in a Time of Crisis [from "A Narrative of the Proceedings of the Black People during the Late Awful Calamity in Philadelphia"]
● Several persons / A Plea for Federal Protection for Manumitted Slaves of the South [from "Petition of Four Free Blacks to the United States House of Representatives, 1797"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 3: Slavery in the Nineteenth Century
● Nat Turner / Rebellion [from "The Confessions of Nat Turner"]
● James W. C. Pennington / The Escape of a Fugitive Slave [from "The Fugitive Blacksmith"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 4: The Free Black Community, 1800-1860
● Henry Highland Garnet / The Slave Must Throw Off the Slaveholder [from "Address to a Convention in Buffalo, 1843"]
● John S. Rock / Black Pride [from "Address to a Meeting in Boston, 1858"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 5: The Civil War and Reconstruction
● Frederick Douglass / Free the Slaves, Then Leave Them Alone [from "Address to the Emancipation League in Boston, 1862"]
● Blanche K. Bruce / Discrimination in Mississippi Elections [from "Address to the United States Senate, 1876"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 6: The Legal Segregation of Free People
● Anon. / The Areas of Racial Discrimination [from "Report of the Committee on Grievances at the State Convention of Colored Men of Texas, 1883"]
● Anon. / Peonage in the South [from "The Life Story of a Negro Peon"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 7: The Organization of Protest
● Booker T. Washington / Education Before Equality [from "The Atlanta Exposition Address, 1893"]
● W. E. B. Du Bois / Equality and Education [from "Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others"]
● NAACP / The NAACP Program for Change [from "The Task for the Future--A Program for 1919"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 8: The Great Migration Brings a New Mood
● Several persons / Why Blacks Chose to Leave the South [from Letters of Negro Migrants of 1916-1918]
● Marcus Garvey / Free Africa for Africans [from "The Negro's Greatest Enemy"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 9: The Depression: Unemployment and Radicalism
● Robert C. Weaver / A New Deal for the Black Man [from "The New Deal and the Negro"]
● Angelo Herndon / A Black Workingman in the Communist Party [from "You Cannot Kill the Working Class"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 10: The Second World War and the Double V
● Walter White / Battle on the Home Front [from "What Caused the Detroit Riots?"]
● Grant Reynolds / The Attitude of the Black Fighting Man [from "What the Negro Thinks of This War"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 11: School Desegregation
● Daisy Bates / Little Rock Prepares for Desegregation [from "Governor Faubus Rouses the Mob"]
● James Meredith / Meredith Cracks Ole Miss [from "I'll Know Victory or Defeat"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 12: The Nonviolent Civil Rights Movement
● Martin Luther King, Jr. / The Philosophy of Nonviolent Coercion [from "Letter from Birmingham Jail"]
● Thomas Gaither / Jail, Not Bail [from "Jailed-In"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part 13: The Militant Black Liberation Movement
● Julius Lester / The Singing Is Over [from "The Angry Children of Malcolm X"]
● Haryou-Act / Conditions in the Urban Ghetto [from "Cries of Harlem"]
● Malcolm X / Liberation by Any Means Necessary [from "Address to a Meeting in New York, 1964"]
● Black Panther Party / All Power to the People -- Black Power to Black People [from "What We Want, What We Believe"
Suggestions for Further Reading
Part I4: Black Power Explained
● Stokely Carmichael / The Meaning of Black Power [from "Toward Black Liberation"]
● Whitney Young, Jr. / The Urban League Interprets Black Power [from "Address to a CORE Convention in Columbus, Ohio, 1968"]
● James Forman / The Black Manifesto [from "Address to the National Black Economic Development Conference, 1969"]
Suggestions for Further Reading
General Reading Suggestions
Item Number
A0551b
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Title | Alternate label | Class |
---|---|---|
Afro-American History: Primary Sources | Other editions, reprints, and translations | Bibliographic Resource |
Readings in African-American History (3rd ed.) | Other editions, reprints, and translations | Bibliographic Resource |
Afro-American History: Primary Sources (2nd ed.) | Other editions, reprints, and translations | Bibliographic Resource |