AAIHS

AAIHS

African American Intellectual History Society

Follow Us On Social Media

  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Published by AAIHS

  • Home
  • About
    • About Black Perspectives
  • Featured Books
  • Author Interviews
  • Roundtables
  • Resources
    • AF AM Job Openings
    • #Charlestonsyllabus
    • Prison Abolition Syllabus
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
AAIHS Business
Abolition
Abolitionism
Activism
Africa
African American Death Ideology
African American History survey
African American material culture
African diaspora
American exceptionalism
American identity
American Revolution
Antebellum
anti-capitalism
Archives
Art
Assimilationism
Author Interview
Black Ecologies
Black Ecolories
Black Europe
Black Family
Black Feminism
Black Freethought
Black Girls
Black history
Black Identity
Black Internationalism
Black Political Thought
Black Power
Black Protest
Black Protestantism
Black Studies
Black Urban History
Black Youth
Book Review
capitalism
Caribbean
Cemetery/Burial Grounds
Civil Rights Movement
Civil War
class
Comics
Death
Desegregation
early republic
Economics
Education
Embodiment
Featured Books
Featured Posts
Film
Free People of Color
Gender
Geography
Hashtag Syllabi
Higher Education
Hip-Hop
historiography
HIV-AIDS
Indigenous Studies
Intellectual Identity
Interview
Interwar Period
Jazz
Jim Crow
Labor
Latin America
Law and legal history
LGBT
Liberalism
Literature
Lynchings
Marcus Garvey
maroons
Meaning of freedom
medical racism
Memory
methods
Military
Monuments
Mourning
Museums
Music
New Negro
Oral History
Pedagogy
Performance
Plantations
Poetry
Policing
Popular Culture
Post-Racial ideology
Primary Sources
Print Culture
Prisons
Professional Development
Race
Race Consciousness
Racial Violence
Racism
Reconstruction
Religion
Resistance
Resources
respectability
Roundtables
School Equality
Science Fiction
Sexuality
Slave law
Slave revolts
Slavery
Sport
Teaching
Uncategorized
UNIA
Visuality
Voting rights
Webinars
Women

Author: Keisha N. Blain

The Ruth Simms Hamilton African Diaspora Series: An Interview with Quito Swan and Glenn Chambers

October 25, 2016March 26, 2017 Keisha N. Blain Black Power Studies

In today’s post, I sit down with Professors Quito Swan and Glenn Chambers to discuss their book series on the

Read more

Why We Need the #CharlestonSyllabus Now

October 4, 2016March 26, 2017 Keisha N. Blain #CharlestonSyllabus, Charleston, police brutality, police violence, South Carolina

On Friday, Sept. 23rd, the University of Georgia Press hosted the Charleston Syllabus Symposium at the University of Georgia. The

Read more

Sex Workers, Psychics, and Numbers Runners: A New Book on Black Women in New York City

September 5, 2016March 26, 2017 Keisha N. Blain archives, Black women, Harlem, New York, research

Today is the beginning of our online roundtable on LaShawn Harris’s new book, Sex Workers, Psychics, and Numbers Runners: Black

Read more

The Passing of Professor Leslie Brown

August 18, 2016August 20, 2016 Keisha N. Blain Leslie Brown

Leslie Brown died of leukemia in Boston on August 5 surrounded by loving friends and her long term partner Annie

Read more

“A Soothing Balm to My Soul”: Remembering Leslie Brown

August 15, 2016February 24, 2017 Keisha N. Blain Leslie Brown

In April 2016, towards the end of my first year on the tenure track, I met Leslie Brown. I remember

Read more
  • ← Previous
  • Next →
Copyright © 2025 AAIHS. All rights reserved. Site by GNDWS