Black political thought from David Walker to the present

Bibliographic Information

Black political thought from David Walker to the present

edited by Sherrow O. Pinder

Cambridge University Press, 2020

  • : pbk

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Black political thought : from David Walker to the present

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In Black Political Thought: From David Walker to the Present, Sherrow O. Pinder has brought together the writings and discourses central to black political thought and African American politics, compiling a unique anthology of speeches and articles from over 150 years of African American history. Providing in-depth examinations and critical analyses of topics such as slavery, reconstruction, race and racism, black nationalism and black feminism - from a range of perspectives - students are equipped with a comprehensive and informative account of how these issues have fundamentally shaped and continue to shape black political thinking. Each of the six thematic parts is framed by an introduction written by black scholars working in the field, and a list of further readings. Individual chapters are then enhanced by end-of-chapter questions and author biographies. Written for the interdisciplinary field of black studies, and other social science and humanities disciplines, this textbook offers a unique resource for political scientists, sociologists, historians, feminists, and the general reader of black political thought.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Key concepts, ideas, and issues that have formed black political thought Sherrow O. Pinder
  • Part I. Slavery and its Discontents: Let your Motto Be Resistance! Resistance! Resistance! Brenda E. Stevenson
  • 1. Our wretchedness in consequence of slavery David Walker
  • 2. An address to the slaves of the United States Henry Highland Garnet
  • 3. Comparative condition of the colored people of the United States Martin Robison Delany
  • 4. What to the slave is the Fourth of July? Frederick Douglass
  • 5. Why sit ye here and die Maria Stewart
  • Part II. Reconstruction: Nikki Lynne Marie Brown
  • 6. Of the dawn of freedom W. E. B. Du Bois
  • 7. Political independence of the Negro T. Thomas Fortune
  • 8. The case of the Negro Booker T. Washington
  • Part III. Black Nationalism: Babacar M'Baye
  • 9. A vindication of the capacity of the Negro race for self-government, and civilized progress James Theodore Holly
  • 10. The true solution of the Negro problem Marcus Garvey
  • 11. Toward black liberation Stokely Carmichael
  • Part IV. Race and Racism: Cahrisse Burden-Stelly
  • 12. The race-problem in America Alexander Crummell
  • 13. The conservation of the races W. E. B. Du Bois
  • 14. Lynch laws in all its phases Ida B. Wells
  • Part V. Feminism and Difference: Sherrow O. Pinder
  • 15. The progress of colored women Mary Church Terrell
  • 16. What's in a name? Womanism, black feminism and beyond Patricia Hill Collins
  • 17. To be black, male, and 'feminist' - making womanist space for black men Gary L. Lemons
  • Part VI. Past, Present, and Future Issues: Erica Cooper
  • 18. Whiteness as property Cheryl I. Harris
  • 19. Whiteness, racism, and identity Barbara J. Fields
  • 20. The antidemocratic power of whiteness Kathleen Neal Cleaver
  • Glossary
  • Index.

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