| Index to Volume
90 |
| |
|
| Number 1-2 |
Winter-Spring 2005 |
| "Brown v. Board
of Education: Fifty Years of Educational Change in the United States,
1954-2004"
|
| INTRODUCTION: BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION: FIFTY YEARS
OF EDUCATIONAL CHANGE IN THE UNITED STATES
by V.P. Franklin
|
1
|
| “HE SAID HE WOULDN’T HELP ME GET A JIM CROW
BUS”: THE SHIFTING TERMS OF THE CHALLENGE TO SEGREGATED PUBLIC EDUCATION,
1950-1954
by Brett Gadsden
|
9
|
“WE WILL BE READY WHENEVER THEY ARE”: AFRICAN
AMERICAN TEACHERS AND THE DESEGREGATION OF THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS IN NASHVILLE,
TENNESSEE, 1954-1966
by Sonya Ramsey
|
30 |
THE LAUNCHING OF THE SIT-IN MOVEMENT: THE ROLE OF BLACK
WOMEN AT BENNETT COLLEGE
by Deidre B. Flowers
|
54 |
FROM DESEGREGATION TO RESESEGREGATION: PUBLIC SCHOOLS
IN NORFOLK, VIRGINIA, 1954-2002
by Mary C. Doyle
|
66 |
TUFTS UNIVERSITY’S INVOLVEMENT IN PUBLIC SCHOOL
DESEGREGATION IN BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, 1960-1980
by Amy Rutenberg
|
87 |
INTEGRATION AND INCLUSION – A TROUBLING NEXUS:
RACE, DISABILITY, AND SPECIAL EDUCATION
By David J. Connor and Beth A. Ferri
|
111 |
DISCOURSES OF DIFFERENCE AND THE OVERREPRESENTATION
OF BLACK STUDENTS IN SPECIAL EDUCATION
by Kathy-Anne Jordan
|
133 |
REPRESENTATIONS OF BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION IN SELECTED
EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES FOR MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS
by Gregory Bynum
|
156 |
| BOOK REVIEWS
|
Gregory J.W. Urwin, BLACK FLAG OVER DIXIE: RACIAL
ATROCITIES AND REPRIALS IN THE CIVIL WAR
by Christopher M. Span
|
173 |
Derek Vaillant, SOUNDS OF REFORM: PROGRESSIVISM AND
MUSIC IN CHICAGO, 1863-1935
by Charles Branham
|
|
Steven D. Classen, WATCHING JIM CROW: THE STRUGGLES
OVER MISSISSIPPI TV, 1955-1969
by Stefan Bradley
|
|
| Lewis V. Baldwin and Amiri YaSin Al-Hadid,
BETWEEN CROSS AND CRESCENT: CHRISTIAN AND MUSLIM PERSPECTIVES ON MALCOLM
AND MARTIN
by Mark L. Chapman
|
|
Scot Brown, FIGHTING FOR US: MAULANA KARENGA, THE
US ORGANIZATION, AND BLACK CULTURAL NATIONALISM
by Joy Ann Williamson
|
|
Andrew Warnes, HUNGER OVERCOME? FOOD AND RESISTANCE
IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE
by Tiffany Flowers
|
|
James Jennings, WELFARE REFORM AND THE REVITALIZATION
OF INNER CITY NEIGHBORHOODS
by Lionel Kimble, Jr.
|
|
Elizabeth C. Fine, SOULSTEPPING: AFRICAN AMERICAN
STEP SHOWS
by Gloria Harper Dickinson
|
|
Carolyn West, VIOLENCE IN THE LIVES OF BLACK WOMEN:
BATTERED BLACK AND BLUE
by Monica A. White
|
|
Abdul Alkalimat, THE AFRICAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
IN CYBERSPACE: A RESOURCE GUIDE TO THE BEST WEB SITES ON BLACK CULTURE
AND HISTORY
by Donna Thompson Ray
|
|
|
ANNOUNCEMENTS
CARTER G. WOODSON DISINGUISHED LECTURERS, 2004-2005
|
|
| Number 3 |
Summer
2005 |
Special Issue
"The History of Hip Hop"
|
| COMMENTARY: SEND IN THE CLOWNS…PLEASE!
by V.P. Franklin
|
|
| INTRODUCTION: HIP HOP IN HISTORY: PAST, PRESENT, AND
FUTURE
by Derrick P. Alridge and James B. Stewart
|
|
| MESSAGE IN THE MUSIC: POLITICAL COMMENTARY IN BLACK
POPULAR MUSIC FROM RHYTHM AND BLUES TO EARLY HIP HOP
by James B. Stewart
|
|
| FROM CIVIL RIGHTS TO HIP-HOP: TOWARD A NEXUS OF IDEAS
by Derrick P. Alridge
|
|
| OPPOSITIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS WITHIN AN OPPOSITIONAL REALM:
THE CASE OF FEMINISM AND WOMANISM IN RAP AND HIP HOP, 1976-2004
by Layli Phillips, Kerri Reddick-Morgan, and Dionne Patricia Stephens
|
|
| IN SEARCH OF THE “REVOLUTIONARY GENERATION”:
(EN)GENDERING THE GOLDEN AGE OF RAP NATIONALISM
by Charise Cheney
|
|
| “OF ALL OUR STUDIES, HISTORY IS BEST QUALIFIED
TO REWARD OUR RESEARCH”: BLACK HISTORY’S RELEVANCE TO THE
HIP HOP GENERATION
by Pero Gaglo Dagbovie
|
|
| BOOK REVIEWS
|
Carol Faulkner, WOMEN’S RADICAL RECONSTRUCTION:
THE FREEDMEN’S AID MOVEMENT
by Linda M. Perkins
|
|
Albert G. Miller, ELEVATING THE RACE: THEOPHILUS
G. STEWARD, BLACK THEOLOGY, AND THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN CIVIL SOCIETY,
1865-1924
by Kennetta Hammond Perry
|
|
Jerry Gershenhorn, MELVILLE HERSKOVITS AND THE RACIAL
POLITICS OF KNOWLEDGE
by Vernon J. Williams, Jr.
|
|
Gerald Horne, RACE WAR: WHITE SUPREMACY AND THE JAPANESE
ATTACK ON THE BRITISH EMPIRE
by William Banks
|
|
Heather Ann Thompson, WHOSE DETROIT? POLITICS, LABOR,
AND RACE IN A NORTHERN CITY
by Lionel Kimble, Jr.
|
|
David L. Chappell, A STONE OF HOPE: PROPHETIC RELIGION
AND THE DEATH OF JIM CROW
by Donald Cunnigen
|
|
Dionne Danns, SOMETHING BETTER FOR OUR CHILDREN:
BLACK ORGANIZATION IN THE CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS, 1963-1971
by Adah Ward Randolph
|
|
Michael Bonds, RACE, POLITICS, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
FUNDING: THE DISCOLOR OF MONEY
by Max Grinnell
|
|
Gayle T.Tate and Lewis A. Randolph, eds., DIMENSIONS
OF BLACK CONSERVATISM IN THE UNITED STATES
by Ellwood Watson
|
|
Magnificent Montague with Bob Baker, BURN, BABY!
BURN! THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF THE MAGNIFICANT MONTAGUE
by Korey Bowers Brown
|
|
<
|
ANNOUNCEMENTS
|
|