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: racism


Online Forum: What is African American Intellectual History?

June 4, 2019June 3, 2019 AAIHS Editors #RethinkingAAIH, black intellectual history, Black political thought, intellectual

June 10-14, 2019 Black Perspectives, the award-winning blog of the African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS), is hosting an online forum titled “What is

Read more

Department Stores and the Black Freedom Movement: A New Book in Civil Rights History

May 31, 2019June 4, 2019 J. T. Roane black politics, black protest, civil rights, Civil Rights Movement, economic justice, Jim Crow, labor, Resistance

This post is part of our blog series that announces the publication of selected new books in African American History

Read more
Psychiatric clinic, c. 1930. Photo: PBS.

Luke Cage and the History of Medical Exploitation

May 30, 2019May 29, 2019 Matthew Teutsch comic books, comics, Luke Cage, medical experimentation, racism

The first story arc in David Walker’s Luke Cage run, “Sins of the Father,” sees Cage headed to New Orleans to attend

Read more
Audre Lorde standing in front of board reading "Women are powerful and dangerous." Source: The Guardian.

Black Feminist Alchemy, Reproductive Justice, and the Carceral State

May 27, 2019May 25, 2019 Dan Berger black feminism, carceral state, mass incarceration, Prison Abolition, reproductive justice

In the poem “Revolution is One Form of Social Change,” Audre Lorde describes patriarchy as the foundation of the inequality

Read more

Poll Power: A New Book about the Voter Education Project

May 17, 2019May 7, 2019 J. T. Roane civil rights, Civil Rights Movement, South, voting

This post is part of our blog series that announces the publication of selected new books in African American History

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