Research Catalog

African American political thought, 1890-1930 : Washington, Du Bois, Garvey, and Randolph

Title
African American political thought, 1890-1930 : Washington, Du Bois, Garvey, and Randolph / edited by Cary D. Wintz.
Publication
Armonk, N.Y. : M.E. Sharpe, [1996], ©1996.

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TextRequest in advance E185.61 .A239 1996Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
Wintz, Cary D., 1943-
Description
xiv, 344 pages : portraits; 24 cm
Subjects
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
  • I. Booker T. Washington. 1. Letter to the Editor, Montgomery Advertiser, April 30, 1885. 2. Atlanta Exposition Address. 3. Address at the Unveiling of the Monument to Robert Gould Shaw. 4. Open Letter to the Louisiana Constitutional Convention, February 19, 1898. 5. Letter to W.E.B. Du Bois, October 26, 1899. 6. Interview, Atlanta Constitution, November 10, 1899. 7. Letter to W.E.B. Du Bois, March 11, 1900. 8. Letter to the Editor of the Montgomery Advertiser, September 23, 1901. 9. Letter to Theodore Roosevelt, October 16, 1901. 10. The Negro and the Signs of Civilization. 11. Statement on Suffrage, Philadelphia North American. 12. Statement Before the Washington Conference on the Race Problem in the United States. 13. Speech to the National Afro-American Council. 14. Letter to W.E.B. Du Bois, January 27, 1904. 15. A Protest against Lynching. 16. The Negro and the Labor Problem of the South. 17. Letter to President Theodore Roosevelt, December 26, 1904.
  • 18. The Negro in the North: Are His Advantages as Great as in the South. 19. Letter to William Howard Taft, June 4, 1908. 20. A Statement on Lynching. 21. Letter to the Editor, Montgomery Advertiser, December 30, 1910. 22. Letter to C. Elias Winston, October 2, 1914. 23. Speech to the National Negro Business League, August 18, 1915. 24. My View of Segregation Laws -- II. W.E.B. Du Bois. 1. Letter to Booker T. Washington, September 24, 1895. 2. Strivings of the Negro People. 3. Letter to Booker T. Washington, February 17, 1900. 4. The Evolution of Negro Leadership. 5. The Parting of the Ways. 6. Letter to Oswald Garrison Villard, March 24, 1905. 7. Declaration of Principles. 8. Two Editorials: "The Crisis" and "Agitation" 9. A Philosophy for 1913. 10. The Immediate Program of the American Negro. 11. "Booker T. Washington" and "An Open Letter to Robert Russa Moton" 12. Close Ranks. 13. Returning Soldiers. 14. White Co-workers. 15. Marcus Garvey.
  • 16. A Lunatic or a Traitor. 17. The Tragedy of"Jim Crow" 18. The New Crisis. 19. Race Relations in the United States. 20. Economic Disfranchisement. 21. Marxism and the Negro Problem. 22. Pan-Africa and New Racial Philosophy. 23. Segregation. 24. The Board of Directors on Segregation. 25. A Negro Nation within the Nation -- III. Marcus Garvey. 1. The Negro's Greatest Enemy. 2. Letter to Robert Russa Moton, February 29, 1916. 3. West Indies in the Mirror of Truth. 4. Editorials in Negro World: "Advice of the Negro to Peace Conference" and "Race Discrimination Must Go" 5. George Cross Van Dusen to J. Edgar Hoover, March 19, 1921. 6. Address to the New York City Division of the UNIA, January 26, 1919. 7. Address to UNIA Supporters in Philadelphia, October 21, 1919. 8. Declaration of the Rights of the Negro Peoples of the World. 9. Editorial Letter in Negro World, September 11, 1920. 10. Address to the Second UNIA Convention, New York, August 31, 1921.
  • 11. Motive of the NAACP Exposed. 12. The Wonders of the White Man in Building America. 13. What We Believe. 14. Editorial Letter Written to Negro World, February 10, 1925. 15. Two Editorial Letters from New Orleans, December 10, 1927 -- IV. A. Philip Randolph. 1. The Negro in Politics. 2. Lynching: Capitalism Its Cause; Socialism Its Cure. 3. New Leadership for the Negro. 4. The Crisis of the Crisis. 5. Two Editorials: "Racial Equality" and "The Failure of the Negro Church" 6. The Negro Radicals. 7. The New Negro - What Is He? 8. Garvey Unfairly Attacked. 9. Marcus Garvey! 10. Reply to Marcus Garvey. 11. The State of the Race. 12. Segregation in the Public Schools: A Promise or a Menace. 13. Jim Crow Niggers. 14. Negroes and the Labor Movement. 15. The Negro and Economic Radicalism. 16. The New Pullman Porter. 17. The Negro Faces the Future. 18. The Need of a Labor Background. 19. Hating All White People. 20. Negro Congressmen.
  • 21. Consumers' Co-operation. 22. The Economic Crisis of the Negro.
ISBN
  • 1563241781 (alk. paper)
  • 156324179X (pbk. : alk. paper)
LCCN
95033287
OCLC
ocm33014021
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries