To Make Our World Anew: Volume II cover art

To Make Our World Anew: Volume II

A History of African Americans from 1880

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Here is a panoramic view of African American life, rich in gripping first-person accounts and short character sketches that invite listeners to relive history as African Americans experienced it. We begin in Africa, with the growth of the slave trade, and follow the forced migration of what is estimated to be between ten and twenty million people, witnessing the terrible human cost of slavery in the colonies of England and Spain. We hear of the Haitian Revolution, which ended victoriously in 1804 with the birth of the first independent black nation in the New World, and of slave rebellions and resistance in the United States in the years leading up to the Civil War. There are vivid accounts of the Civil War and Reconstruction years, the backlash of notorious "Jim Crow" laws and mob lynchings, and the founding of key black educational institutions. The contributors also trace the migration of blacks to the major cities, the birth of the Harlem Renaissance, the hardships of the Great Depression and the service of African Americans in World War II, the struggle for Civil Rights in the 1950s and '60s, and the emergence of today's black middle class.

From Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass to Martin Luther King, Jr., and Louis Farrakhan, To Make Our World Anew is an unforgettable portrait of a people.

©2000 Oxford University Press, Inc.; Preface copyright 2005 by Oxford University Press, Inc. (P)2022 Tantor
Americas Black & African American Social Sciences United States Social justice Discrimination Africa Civil War War Civil rights Martin Luther King Equality Socialism American History Law Human Rights Capitalism
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