African American Political Thought: Confrontation vs. compromise, from 1945 to the presentMarcus D. Pohlmann Taylor & Francis, 2003 - 2112 páginas This new collection of articles provides comprehensive coverage of major and minor figures in the history of African American politics, from Colonial America to the present. Organized around pivotal conflicts and debates, this six-volume set includes a vast array of original articles, speeches, statements, and documents from African American thinkers such as Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. Dubois, Langston Hughes, Martin Luther King, Roy Wilkins, Malcolm X, Angela Davis, Booker T. Washington, Elijah Muhammed, Jesse Jackson, and may more. |
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Índice
Statement of Purpose | 85 |
The Moment of Truth | 107 |
The Negro Revolt | 131 |
The Story of Plaquemine | 150 |
The Potential of a Minority Revolution | 174 |
A Temporary Change of Emphasis | 188 |
On the Vietnam | 207 |
Executive Mandate No 1 May 2 1967 | 221 |
The Land Question and Black Liberation | 269 |
No More Guns | 285 |
Speech to Congress of African Peoples Atlanta 1970 | 298 |
Why I Saw Fit to Purchase Guns | 314 |
A Conversation with the Reverend Jesse Jackson | 331 |
Notes on the House of Bondage | 355 |
Joining the Political Process | 365 |
The Third Rebellion November 23 1994 | 386 |
The Correct Handling of a Revolution July 20 1967 | 234 |
Liberation Will Come from a Black Thing | 250 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
action African American Alabama become believe Birmingham Black community Black Panther Black Panther Party black political Black Power brothers brutality called church citizens color confront decision Democratic desegregation economic Elijah Muhammad equal evil fact fight force freedom Freedom Rides ghetto goal guns Harlem human James Farmer justice land leaders leadership liberation live major Malcolm MALCOLM X Martin Luther King masses means ment militant Montgomery moral move NAACP nation negro america Negro community never nigger nonviolent resistance official oppressed oppressor organization party patron-recipient relationship peace percent person police position power structure President problem programs protest race racial racism Rap Brown revolution revolutionary SCLC seek segregation self-defense slaves social society South Southern Stokely Carmichael struggle suicide talk things tion U.S. Supreme Court United Urban League Vietnam violence vote voters