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: hip hop


Sara Baartman, Say Her Name: A Bicentennial Anniversary

January 16, 2016January 15, 2016 Janell Hobson #sayhername, South Africa

One of the stranger stories that broke with the new year was the report (now discredited) of pop star Beyoncé writing

Read more

Abolition in the New Year

January 7, 2016January 6, 2016 Chernoh Sesay Jr. Absalom Jones, religion, Richard Allen, slave trade, slavery

Far more people probably know the importance of January 1, 1863 than they do the significance of January 1, 1808.

Read more

Black Intellectual History Panels at #AHA16

January 5, 2016January 6, 2016 Chris Cameron

We here at AAIHS are getting excited for this week’s American Historical Association conference. On the program you will find

Read more

Getting the Word Out: The Circulation of Black Power Newspapers

December 30, 2015December 30, 2015 Paul Hébert Abeng, Canada, Caribbean, Jamaica, Montreal, Walter Rodney

Back in October, I wrote about Abeng, the short-lived Jamaican radical newspaper which, in the late 1960s, played a central

Read more

When Slaves Go on Strike: W.E.B. Du Bois’s Black Reconstruction 80 Years Later

December 28, 2015December 28, 2015 Guy Emerson Mount Activism, black politics, Politics, reconstruction, W.E.B. Du Bois

Slaves freed themselves.  With this majestic assertion in 1935, W.E.B. Du Bois all but cemented Black Reconstruction as one of

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