Although African American newspapers harshly criticized Soviet leaders for opportunism in canceling Black and White, they nonetheless provided a critical venue for many African Americans to speak Soviet anti-racism in the years following the controversy. Indeed, editors of the non-Communist African ...
African American newspapers in the 1930s faced many hardships .For instance, knowing that buyers of African American papers also bought general - circulation papers ,advertisersof consumer products often ignored African American publications . Advertisers' discriminationdidfree the African American press fro...
African American newspapers in the 1930s faced many hardships. For instance, knowing that buyers of African American papers also bought general-circulation papers,advertisersof consumer products often ignored African American publications. Advertisers’ discrimination did free the African American press from ...
Using newspapers that circulated in popular migration destinations, films, plays, and travel writers' accounts to trace popular ideas about African survivals, this chapter charts a mounting obsession with southern black voodoo and superstition that reenergizes the debate over African survivals in the ...
By the end of the 20th century African Americans comprised 21 percent of all postal employees, serving at all levels of the Postal Service. Theodore Roosevelt’s “Square Deal” [Roosevelt] is not so much now an American President as he is the President of the black belt. Senator Hernando ...
racism were not limited to the black toolmaker and the Stalingrad trial of his white American assailants. Rather, during the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Soviet press depicted real and fictional African Americans embraced as equals in the first workers' state and as lynched, imprisoned, ...
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Take a journey with me as we honor some of the greatest Black pioneers in college sports, men we are proud to call Hawkeyes. African-Americans in Hawkeye Sports – The First Three The first three African-American athletes to represent the Universit...
Pair of newspapers discussing Paul Cuffe's colonization efforts in Sierra Leone. Lot 70 (AFRICA.) Henry W. Johnson. Letter written as a prominent Black emigrant to Liberia. Lot 71 (AFRICA.) William McLain. Letter soliciting funds for the American Colonization Society. Lot 72 (AFRICA.) ...
racism were not limited to the black toolmaker and the Stalingrad trial of his white American assailants. Rather, during the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Soviet press depicted real and fictional African Americans embraced as equals in the first workers' state and as lynched, imprisoned, ...
Documents of Historical and Genealogical Interest to Researchers of Wilson County, North Carolina's African-American Past