| Index to Volume
89 |
| |
|
| Number 1 |
Winter 2004 |
| "PROVIDING FOR THE FUTURE": THE WORLD OF THE AFRICAN
AMERICAN DEPOSITORS OF WASHINGTON, DC'S FREEDMEN'S SAVINGS BANK, 1865-1874
by Barbara P. Josiah
|
1
|
| "SUPPORTING OUR FRIENDS AND DEFEATING OUR ENEMIES":
MILITANCY AND NON-PARTISANSHIP IN THE NAACP, 1936-1948
by Simon Topping
|
17
|
GOD, GANDHI, AND GUNS: THE AFRICAN AMERICAN FREEDOM
STRUGGLE IN TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA, 1964-1965
by Simon Wendt
|
36 |
SOUL CITY, NORTH CAROLINA: BLACK POWER, UTOPIA, AND
THE AFRICAN AMERICAN DREAM
by Christopher Strain
|
57 |
| ESSAY REVIEW
|
CORNEL WEST ON SOCIAL JUSTICE
by Floyd W. Hayes III
|
75
|
| BOOK REVIEWS
|
Barbara Ransby, ELLA BAKER AND THE BLACK FREEDOM MOVEMENT:
A RADICAL DEMOCRATIC VISION
by Gayle T. Tate
|
80 |
Sheila S. Walker, ed., AFRICAN ROOTS/AMERICAN CULTURES:
AFRICA IN THE CREATION OF THE AMERICAS
by Benjamin A. Cowan
|
|
Stanley Harrold, SUBVERSIVES: ANTISLAVERY COMMUNITY
IN WASHINGTON, D.C., 1828-1865
by David Taft Terry
|
|
| Joanne-Megna-Wallace, UNDERSTANDING
I KNOW WHY THE CAGED BIRD SINGS: A STUDENT CASEBOOK
by Loretta G. Woodard
|
|
Sasha Torres,BLACK, WHITE, AND IN COLOR: TELEVISION
AND BLACK CIVIL RIGHTS
by Richard M. Breaux
|
|
ANNOUNCEMENTS
CARTER G. WOODSON DISINGUISHED LECTURERS, 2003-2004
|
|
| |
|
| Number 2 |
Spring 2004 |
| "African Americans
and the Urban Landscape"
|
| INTRODUCTION: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE URBAN LANDSCAPE
by Linda Serece Williams
|
93
|
| CAPITAL OF THE CARIBBEAN:
THE AFRICAN AMERICAN-WEST INDIAN HARLEM
NEXUS AND THE TRANSNATIONAL DRIVE FOR BLACK FREEDOM, 1940-1948
by Jason Parker
|
98 |
| POLICE-BLACK COMMUNITY RELATIONS IN POSTWAR PHILDELPHIA:
RACE AND CRIMINALIZATION IN URBAN SOCIAL SPACES, 1945-1960
by Karl E. Johnson
|
118 |
| THE "NOT-BUYING POWER" OF THE BLACK COMMUNITY:
URBAN BOYCOTTS AND EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY,
1960-1964
by Stacy Kinlock Sewell
|
135 |
| LATASHA HARLINS, SOON JA DU, AND JOYCE KARLIN: A CASE
STUDY OF MULTICULTURAL FEMALE VIOLENCE AND JUSTICE ON THE URBAN FRONTIER
by Brenda E. Stevenson
|
152 |
| SPECIAL REPORT
|
| RECOGNIZING VALUE IN AFRICAN AMERICAN HERITAGE OBJECTS
by Elvin Montgomery
|
177 |
| BOOK REVIEWS
|
| Gayle T. Tate, UNKNOWN TONGUES: BLACK WOMEN’S
POLITICAL ACTIVISM IN THE ANTEBELLUM ERA, 1820-1860
by Rhett Jones
|
183 |
| Marvin McAllister, “WHITE PEOPLE DO NOT KNOW
HOW TO BEHAVE AT ENTERTAINMENTS FOR LADIES AND GENTELMEN OF COLOUR”:
WILLIAM BROWN’S AFRICAN AND AMERICAN THEATER
by Nikki Taylor
|
185 |
| Jacqueline Glass
Campbell, WHEN
SHERMAN MARCHED NORTH FROM THE SEA: RESISTANCE
ON THE CONFEDERATE HOME FRONT
by Michael E. Long
|
187 |
| Arnoldo DeLeon, RACIAL FRONTIERS: AFRICANS, CHINESE,
AND MEXICANS IN WESTERN AMERICA, 1848-1890
by Albert S. Broussard
|
189 |
| Robert C. Hayden, MR. HARLEM HOSPITAL: DR. LOUIS
T. WRIGHT
by Frederick Newsome
|
191 |
| Carroll Parrott Blue, THE DAWN AT MY BACK: MEMOIR
OF A BLACK TEXAS
UPBRINGING
by Stephanie Wright
|
193 |
| Joy Ann Williamson, BLACK POWER ON CAMPUS: THE UNIVERSITY
OF ILLINOIS, 1965-1975
by Michael Fultz
|
195 |
| Maurice O. Wallace, CONSTRUCTING THE BLACK MASCULINE:
IDENTITY AND IDEALITY IN AFRICAN AMERICAN MEN'S LITERATURE AND CULTURE,
1775-1995
by Zachery Williams
|
196 |
| ANNOUNCEMENTS
|
199 |
| |
|
| Number 3 |
Summer 2004 |
| "New Directions
in African American Women’s History"
|
| INTRODUCTION: NEW DIRECTIONS IN AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN'S
HISTORY
by Francille Rusan Wilson
|
199 |
| THINKING LOCALLY, ACTING GLOBALLY: THE INTERNATIONAL
AGENDA OF AFRICAN AMERICAN CLUBWOMEN, 1888-1940
by Michelle Rief
|
203 |
| A GENERATION OF WOMEN ACTIVISTS: AFRICAN AMERICAN FEMALE
EDUCATORS IN HARLEM, 1930-1950
by Lauri Johnson
|
223 |
BLACK WOMEN HISTORIANS FROM THE LATE 19TH CENTURY TO THE
DAWN OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
by Pero Gaglo Dagbovie |
241 |
| ESSAY REVIEW I: AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN, CIVIL RIGHTS,
AND BLACK POWER
by June O. Patton
|
262 |
| ESSAY REVIEW II: BLACK AND WHITE WOMEN HISTORIANS TOGETHER?
by Francille Rusan Wilson
|
266 |
| BOOK REVIEWS
|
| Lynn M. Hudson, THE MAKING OF “MAMMY PLEASANT”:
A BLACK ENTREPRENEUR IN NINETEENTH CENTURY SAN FRANCISCO
by Kenneth W. Goings
|
270 |
| Rayvon Fouché, BLACK INVENTORS IN THE AGE OF
SEGREGATION: GRANVILLE T. WOODS, LEWIS H. LATIMER, AND SHELBY DAVIDSON
by Robert C. Hayden
|
271 |
| Frank N. Schubert, ed., VOICES OF THE BUFFALO SOLDIER:
RECORDS, REPORTS, AND RECOLLECTIONS OF MILITARY LIFE AND SERVICE IN THE
WEST
by Sandra E. Bowen
|
273 |
| Michael E. Lomax, BLACK BASEBALL ENTREPRENEURS, 1860-1901:
OPERATING BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY
by David Spivey
|
275 |
| Matthias Reiss, “DIE SCHWARZEN WAREN UNSERE FREUNDE”:
DEUTSCHE KRIEGSGEFANGENE IN DER AMERIKANISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT, 1942-1946
by Leroy Hopkins, Jr.
|
277 |
| Carol Anderson, EYES OFF THE PRIZE: THE UNITED NATIONS
AND THE AFRICAN AMERICAN STRUGGLE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS, 1944-1955
by Kwame Dixon
|
278 |
| Kate A. Baldwin, BEYOND THE COLOR LINE AND THE IRON
CURTAIN: READING ENCOUNTERS BETWEEN BLACK AND RED, 1932-1963
by Brenda Gayle Plummer
|
280 |
| Nan Elizabeth Woodruff, AMERICAN CONGO: THE AFRICAN
AMERICAN FREEDOM STRUGGLE IN THE DELTA
by Andrew M. Kaye
|
282 |
| James H. Madison, A LYNCHING IN THE HEARTLAND: RACE
AND MEMORY IN AMERICA
by Gregory Mixon
|
283 |
| John H. Scott with Cleo Scott Brown, WITNESS TO THE
TRUTH: MY STRUGGLE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS IN LOUISIANA
by Clyde Robertson
|
285 |
| Bruce R. Hare, ed., 2001 RACE ODYSSEY: AFRICAN AMERICANS
AND SOCIOLOGY
by Ben Frymer
|
287 |
| Linda Williams, PLAYING THE RACE CARD: MELODRAMAS OF
BLACK AND WHITE FROM UNCLE TOM TO O.J. SIMPSON
by Benjamin Justesen
|
289 |
| ANNOUNCEMENTS
|
291 |
| Number 4 |
Fall 2004 |
| THE MARKETING OF DUKE ELLINGTON: SETTING THE STRATEGY
FOR AN AFRICAN AMERICAN MAESTRO
by Harvey G. Cohen
|
291
|
| PINKSTER IN CHICAGO: BUD BILLIKEN AND THE MAYOR OF BRONZEVILLE,
1930-1945
by Peter M. Rutkoff and William B. Scott
|
316
|
| THE NURTURANCE OF AFRICAN AMERICAN SCIENTIFIC TALENT
by Beatrice L. Bridglall and Edmund W. Gordon
|
331
|
| SPECIAL REPORT
|
| ACTUARIAL ISSUES IN INSURANCE ON SLAVES IN THE UNITED
STATES SOUTH
by Cheryl Rhan-Hsin Chen and Gary Simon
|
348 |
| INTERVIEW
|
| AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE NAVY DURING THE CIVIL WAR
by Helen Hannon
|
358 |
| BOOK REVIEWS
|
| Joanna Brooks, AMERICAN LAZARUS: RELIGION AND THE RISE
OF AFRICAN AMERICAN AND NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURES
by Lamont DeHaven King
|
362 |
| Jacqueline Bacon, “THE HUMBLEST MAY STAND FORTH”:
RHETORIC, EMPOWERMENT, AND ABOLITION
by Eric Gardner
|
364 |
| Stanley Harrold, THE RISE OF AGGRESSIVE ABOLITIONISM:
ADDRESSES TO THE SLAVES
by Jacqueline Bacon
|
365 |
| Dylan C. Penningroth, THE CLAIMS OF KINFOLK: AFRICAN
AMERICAN PROPOERTY AND COMMUNITY IN THE NINETEENTHCENTURY SOUTH
by Larry E. Hudson Jr.
|
367 |
| Bonnie Stepenoff, THAD SNOW: A LIFE OF SOCIAL REFORM
IN THE MISSOURI BOOTHEEL
by Debra F. Greene
|
369 |
| Dianne Johnson, editor, THE COLLECTED WORKS OF LANGSTON
HUGHES: WORKS FOR CHILDREN AND YOUNG ADULTS
by Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper
|
371 |
| Tatcho Mindiola, Jr., Yolanda Flores Niemann, and Nestor
Rodriquez, BLACK-BROWN: RELATIONS AND STEREOTYPES
by Zebulon V. Miletsky
|
372 |
| Richard E. Harris, THE AMERICAN ODYSSEY OF A BLACK JOURNALIST,
1933-2003
by Geta LeSeur
|
374 |
| Jerald E. Podair, THE STRIKE THAT CHANGED NEW YORK:
BLACKS, WHITES, AND THE OCEAN HILL-BROWNSVILLE CRISIS
by Clarence Taylor
|
376 |
| Katherine Tate, BLACK FACES IN THE MIRROR: AFRICAN AMERICANS
AND THEIR REPRESENTATIVES IN THE U.S. CONGRESS
by Louis Randolph
|
378 |
| BOOKS RECEIVED
|
381 |
| ANNOUNCEMENTS
|
386 |
| INDEX TO VOLUME 89
|
396 |