The Black Experience in America

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THE BLACK EXPERIENCE IN AMERICA Published electronically by its author, Norman Coombs, and Project Gutenberg. (C 1993) by Norman Coombs

This text is claimed under copyright to protect it's integrity, and therefore you are required to pass it on intact, but you may make changes to your own copy. This text may be shared in whole or in part so long as this header is included. It may be quoted freely so long as its othorship is properly credited. As the book is out of print, the author has chosen to make it freely available.

We want to know of any mistakes you find, so we can correct them in text editions to come. Send corrections to Norman Coombs. His email addresses are: NRCGSH@RITVAX.BITNET or internet NRCGSH@RITVAX.ISC.RIT.EDU.

Neither Prof. Hart nor Project Gutenberg nor Norman Coombs has any official connection with the University of Illinois.

This text is based on the original publication:

THE BLACK EXPERIENCE IN AMERICA The Immigrant Heritage of America By Norman Coombs Publisher: Twayne, (c 1972)

Contents

Preface Acknowledgments Introduction (ommitted from electronic version)

PART ONE From Freedom to Slavery

1. African Origins The Human Cradle West African Empires The Culture of West Africa

2, The Human Market The Slave Trade Caribbean Interlude

3. Slavery As Capitalism The Shape of American Slavery North American and South American Slavery Slavery and the Formation of Character Slave Response

4. All Men Are Created Equal Slavery and the American Revolution Slave Insurrections Growing Racism

Part Two. Emancipation without Freedom

5. A Nation Divided Black Moderates and Militants White Liberals Growth of Extremism

6. From Slavery to Segregation Blue, Gray, and Black Reconstruction and Its Failure The New Racism

7. Racism and Democracy Fighting Jim Crow Making the World Safe for Democracy Urban Riots The Klan Revival

Part Three. The Search For Equality

8. The Crisis of Leadership The Debate Over Means and Ends Booker T. Washington: The Trumpet of Conciliation W. E. B. DuBois: The Trumpet of Confrontation Marcus Garvey: The Trumpet of Pride A. Philip Randolph: The Trumpet of Mobilization

9. The New Negro Immigration and Migration Harlem: "The Promised Land" The Negro Renaissance Black Nationalism

10. Fighting Racism at Home and Abroad Hard Times Again The Second World War The U.S. and the U.N.

11. Civil Rights and Civil Disobedience Schools and Courts The Civil Rights Movement

12. The Black Revolt Civil Disorders Black Power

Epilogue

Notes and References (ommitted from electronic version) Bibliography (ommitted from electronic version) Index (ommitted from electronic version)

Preface

During the last several years, the study of American history has turned a new direction. Previously, it emphasized how the various immigrant groups inAmerica shed their divergent heritages and amalgamated into a new nationality. More recently, scholars and laymen alike have become more sensitive to the ways in which these newcomers have kept aspects from their past alive, and there is a new awareness of the degree to which ethnicity continues as a force within America.

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⏰ Last updated: Jan 06, 2007 ⏰

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