AAIHS

AAIHS

African American Intellectual History Society

Follow Us On Social Media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Latest Posts: BLACK PERSPECTIVES

  • Home
  • About
    • About AAIHS
    • AAIHS OFFICERS
  • Awards
    • Pauli Murray Book Prize
    • C.L.R. James Research Fellowship
    • Maria Stewart Journal Article Prize
    • Du Bois-Wells Prize
  • Membership
    • Join AAIHS
    • Member Login
  • Publications
    • Journal
      • General Info
      • Global Black Thought Journal – Online
    • Blog
  • Events
    • Annual Conference
      • Conference 2026 – General Information
    • Webinars
      • The Uncertainties of Higher Ed in the Age of COVID-19
      • The Nuts and Bolts of Publishing in Black Studies
  • Resources
    • AF AM Job Openings
    • #Charlestonsyllabus
  • Store
  • Donate
  • Contact Us

Search Results for: Cuba


“The Most Important Place in the World”: On Puerto Rico and the Freedom Struggle

August 2, 2019July 28, 2019 Dan Berger Activism, African Diaspora, black politics, black protest, Caribbean, colonialism, freedom, Politics, Puerto Rican history, Puerto Rico, Social Movements

Though the United States has colonized Puerto Rico since 1898, when the country took the island as booty in the

Read more

Voices of Freedom Outside the South: An Oral History Resource

July 23, 2019July 15, 2019 Say Burgin archives, Black Panther Party, black politics, Black Power, Civil Rights Movement, education, oral history, race, teaching

Some of my most exciting moments as an educator have been seeing how students engage with oral histories from the

Read more

(Anti)Blackness, Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution, and Guaidó’s Attempted Coup

July 9, 2019September 16, 2019 Layla Brown-Vincent African Diaspora, Afro-Latin, black politics, capitalism, Caribbean, Cuba, Haiti, Latin America, race, racism

On January 23, 2019 with the support of US Vice President Mike Pence, Juan Guaidó, a white supremacist, anti-people, opposition

Read more

The Common Wind of the African Diaspora

July 5, 2019July 5, 2019 Kevin Dawson academia, academic publishing, African Diaspora, black intellectual history, Caribbean, Cuba, Haiti, race, Resistance, slavery

Julius Scott’s The Common Wind: Afro-American Currents in the Age of the Haitian Revolution is one of the academy’s worst-kept secrets.

Read more

Flavors of Florida: Zora Neale Hurston’s Black Folk Ecologies

July 1, 2019June 21, 2019 James Padilioni Jr African Diaspora, Black Ecologies, black intellectual history, Black women, Caribbean, ethnography, Jim Crow, Zora Neale Hurston

While Zora Neale Hurston’s innovative ethnographic methodologies — including first-hand accounts of her own hoodoo/voodoo initiations — are celebrated by white

Read more
  • ← Previous
  • Next →
Copyright © 2026 AAIHS. All rights reserved. Site by GNDWS