Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 42
pro vyhledávání: '"Peniel E. Joseph"'
Autor:
Peniel E Joseph
Publikováno v:
The American Historical Review. 127:1405-1408
Autor:
Peniel E. Joseph
Publikováno v:
The Journal of African American History. 105:663-672
The year 2019 marked the four hundredth anniversary of the arrival of enslaved Africans on the shores of Jamestown, Virginia, in British North America. The origin story of the ensuing Black...
Autor:
Peniel E. Joseph
One of our preeminent historians of race and democracy argues that the period since 2008 has marked nothing less than America's Third ReconstructionIn The Third Reconstruction, distinguished historian Peniel E. Joseph offers a powerful and personal n
Autor:
Peniel E. Joseph
This “landmark” (Ibram X. Kendi, New York Times–bestselling author of How to Be an Antiracist) dual biography of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King transforms our understanding of the twentieth century's most iconic African American leaders To
Autor:
Peniel E. Joseph
Publikováno v:
Journal of Civil and Human Rights. :126-132
Autor:
Peniel E. Joseph
Publikováno v:
Journal of Southern History. 84:1061-1062
Autor:
Angela Davis, Barbara Ransby, Robin D. G. Kelley, Paul Buhle, James Jennings, Dána-Ain Davis, Priya Parmar, Peniel E. Joseph, Courtney Teague, Bill Fletcher, Premilla Nadasen
Publikováno v:
Souls. 13:416-431
Manning Marable played such a decisive role in shaping radical theories and practices of liberation in the latter twentieth and early twenty-first centuries that it is not easy to imagine our lives...
Autor:
Peniel E. Joseph
Publikováno v:
Journal of American History. 96:751-776
“By all rights, there no longer should be much question about the meaning—at least the intended meaning—of Black Power,” the journalist Charles Sutton observed in January 1967. “Between the speeches and writings of Stokely Carmichael, chair
Autor:
Peniel E. Joseph
Publikováno v:
The American Historical Review. 114:1001-1016
Taylor Branch's^ a/lr/C/i in the King Years stands as a singular achievement in civil rights historiography. Collectively, the trilogy covers the years 1954-1968, the time in which Martin Luther King, Jr. became a national civil rights leader and a g