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


Angela Davis, Charlene Mitchell, and the NAARPR

June 15, 2022June 14, 2022 Tony Pecinovsky abolition, Angela Davis, Charlene Mitchell, Communism, CPUSA, JoAnne Little, National Defense Organization Against Racist And Political Repression, Prison Abolition

In June 1972, an all-white jury acquitted Angela Davis of charges in her alleged role in an August 1970 Marin County, California

Read more

Seeing May Ayim through Her Friends’ Eyes

June 13, 2022June 12, 2022 Tiffany Florvil black intellectual history, black internationalism, Black women

Black German poet and activist May Ayim would have turned sixty-two years old on May 3. She was born in

Read more

Writing on the Legacy of May Ayim

June 3, 2022June 2, 2022 Tiffany Florvil African Diaspora, Black Europe, Black German Movement, Germany, May Ayim, Transnational Feminism

In her suicide note on August 9, 1996, Black German activist-intellectual May Ayim sadly wrote, “I have lived and experienced

Read more

Resurrecting Shirley Chisholm from Symbol to Life

June 1, 2022May 31, 2022 Anastasia Curwood Congressional Black Cacus, Jesse Jackson, Politics, Shirley Chisholm, Sojourner Truth

Fifteen years ago, I decided to write a biography of a Black woman. My scholarly genealogy pushed me toward such

Read more

The Consequences of USCT Soldiering

May 26, 2022May 25, 2022 Holly A. Pinheiro, Jr. Civil War, Pension System, reparations, United States Colored Infantry, United States Colored Troop, USCI, USCT

Solomon Wilson, a Thirty-First United States Colored Infantry (USCI) soldier, died in a regimental hospital on August 6, 1864. An

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