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Harriet Tubman Is Famous As An Abolitionist and Political Activist, but She Was Also A Naturalist
The Underground Railroad conductor's understanding of botany, wildlife biology, geography and astronomy allowed her to guide herself and others to safety.
by
Liza Weisstuch
via
Smithsonian
on
March 10, 2022
What’s In a Black Name? 400 Years of Context.
From Phillis Wheatley to Lil Uzi Vert, Black names and their evolution tell the story of America.
by
Soraya Nadia McDonald
via
Andscape
on
March 1, 2022
The Zora Neale Hurston We Don’t Talk About
In the new nonfiction collection “You Don’t Know Us Negroes,” what emerges is a writer who mastered a Black idiom but seldom championed race pride.
by
Lauren Michele Jackson
via
The New Yorker
on
February 14, 2022
The Harriet Tubman Bicentennial Project
The Harriet Tubman Bicentennial Project explores the meaning of freedom through the example of one extraordinary life.
by
Janell Hobson
via
Ms. Magazine
on
February 1, 2022
Rescuing MLK and His Children's Crusade
A new book traces the tactics of groundbreaking lawyer Constance Baker Motley amid pivotal protests in Birmingham.
by
Tomiko Brown-Nagin
via
Harvard Gazette
on
January 13, 2022
The Indomitable Rev. Addie L. Wyatt
The trailblazing Black labor leader and civil rights activist took her fight for equality from the packinghouse to the pulpit.
by
Kim Kelly
via
The Nation
on
January 11, 2022
The Black Panthers Fed More Hungry Kids Than the State of California
It wasn’t all young men and guns: the Black Panther Party’s programs fed more hungry kids than the state of California.
by
Suzanne Cope
via
Aeon
on
December 10, 2021
Can't You See That I'm Lonely?
“Rescue Me,” on repeat.
by
David Ramsey
via
Oxford American
on
December 7, 2021
Manhattan in East St. Louis
The Club Manhattan could hold about 250 people. They did not know it at the time, but they were the earliest witnesses to the rise of the Queen of Rock & Roll.
by
Maureen Mahon
via
Oxford American
on
December 7, 2021
On Our Knees
What the history of a gesture can tell us about Black creative power.
by
Farah Peterson
via
The American Scholar
on
September 7, 2021
Black Women and Civil War Pensions
At the intersection of gender and racial discrimination, Black widows struggled to get the compensation they deserved.
by
Holly A. Pinheiro Jr.
via
Black Perspectives
on
September 1, 2021
The Misunderstood Talent of Gladys Knight
Gladys Knight and the Pips have always been more beloved by fans than by music historians, but they are essential to the evolution of soul.
by
Emily J. Lordi
via
The New Yorker
on
August 13, 2021
The United States' First Civil Rights Movement
A new history charts the radical agitation around Black rights and freedom back to the early nineteenth century.
by
Kellie Carter Jackson
via
The Nation
on
June 16, 2021
To Find the History of African American Women, Look to Their Handiwork
Our foremothers wove spiritual beliefs, cultural values, and historical knowledge into their flax, wool, silk, and cotton webs.
by
Tiya Miles
via
The Atlantic
on
June 8, 2021
The Women Who Preserved the Story of the Tulsa Race Massacre
Two pioneering Black writers have not received the recognition they deserve for chronicling one of the country’s gravest crimes.
by
Victor Luckerson
via
The New Yorker
on
May 28, 2021
The Forgotten Stories of America's Black Wall Streets
A century after the Tulsa Race Massacre, what happened there is finally more widely known—but other "Black Wall Street" stories remain hidden.
by
Olivia B. Waxman
,
Arpita Aneja
via
TIME
on
May 28, 2021
The Mystery of ‘Harriet Cole’
Whose body was harvested to create a spectacular anatomical specimen, and did that person know they would be on display more than a century later?
by
Jessica Leigh Hester
via
Atlas Obscura
on
March 18, 2021
The Dissenter
The rise of the first Black woman on the Louisiana Supreme Court was characterized by one battle after another with the Deep South’s white power structure.
by
Elon Green
via
The Appeal
on
March 2, 2021
The Trials of Billie Holiday
Two new movies emphasize the singer’s spirit of defiance and political courage.
by
Lidija Haas
via
The New Republic
on
February 26, 2021
Fighting School Segregation Didn't Take Place Just in the South
In the 1950s, Harlem mother Mae Mallory fought a school system that she saw as 'just as Jim Crow' as the one she had attended in the South.
by
Ashley D. Farmer
via
The Conversation
on
February 10, 2021
The Forgotten History of Black Prohibitionism
We often think of the temperance movement as driven by white evangelicals set out to discipline Black Americans and immigrants. That history is wrong.
by
Mark Lawrence Schrad
via
Politico Magazine
on
February 6, 2021
The Powerful, Complicated Legacy of Betty Friedan's 'The Feminine Mystique'
The acclaimed reformer stoked the white, middle-class feminist movement and brought critical understanding to a “problem that had no name”
by
Jacob Muñoz
via
Smithsonian
on
February 4, 2021
Putting Harriet Tubman on the $20 Bill Is Not a Sign of Progress
It's a sign of disrespect.
by
Brittney C. Cooper
via
TIME
on
January 27, 2021
African Americans, Slavery, and Nursing in the US South
Following backlash to the construction of a statue for Mary Seacole, Knight describes the connection between nursing and slavery in the US South.
by
R. J. Knight
via
Nursing Clio
on
January 7, 2021
Cicely Was Young, Black and Enslaved – Her Death Has Lessons That Resonate in Today's Pandemic
US monuments and memorials have overlooked frontline workers and people of color affected by past epidemics. Will we repeat history?
by
Nicole S. Maskiell
via
The Conversation
on
December 2, 2020
Things Ain’t Always Gone Be This Way
Honorée Fanonne Jeffers on how her mother overcame voter suppression and became an activist in her community.
by
Honorée Fanonne Jeffers
via
Kenyon Review
on
December 1, 2020
In Search of Soul
A musicological conversation about the history and social value of Black music.
by
Sasha Frere-Jones
,
Emily J. Lordi
via
Bookforum
on
November 24, 2020
Identity as a Hall of Mirrors
A review of "Descent" – a family story that blends the real world and the imagination.
by
Jesi Buell
via
The Rumpus
on
October 7, 2020
Pointing a Way Forward
The history of suffrage in the South—indeed, the nation—is messy and fraught, and more contentious than is typically remembered.
by
Jessica Wilkerson
via
Southern Cultures
on
October 1, 2020
A Lover’s Blues: The Unforgettable Voice of Margie Hendrix
Remembering the woman who outsang Ray Charles.
by
Tarisai Ngangura
via
Longreads
on
September 2, 2020
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