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AAIHS

African American Intellectual History Society

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Black Power

Motorcyle on Hell Run: A New Book on Tanzania and Pan-Africanism

September 23, 2017September 27, 2017 Julie Hawks Black Power, Caribbean, Pan-Africanism, Tanzania

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

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The Wall of Respect: A New Book on Public Art and Black Liberation

September 15, 2017September 16, 2017 Ibram X. Kendi art, Black Power, black protest, Chicago

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

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Echoes of the 1960s: SNCC and White Liberal Participation in Anti-Racist Movements

September 12, 2017September 14, 2017 Ashley Farmer Activism, black politics, Black Power, black radical tradition, Civil Rights Movement

This first summer under the Trump regime resembles the long red-hot summers of the past. It has been filled with

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Ethel Mae Matthews and the Emmaus House in Atlanta

September 11, 2017September 15, 2017 Tom Adam Davies Activism, Black Power, Black women, Deep South, housing

Fifty years ago, Emmaus House opened its doors for the first time. Located in Peoplestown, a deprived neighborhood southeast of

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Writing an Organizational History of the Black Panthers: An Author’s Response

July 15, 2017July 21, 2017 Robyn C. Spencer #AAIHSRoundtable, #RevolutionHasCome, archives, Black Panther Party, Black Power, research

This post is part of our online roundtable on Robyn Spencer’s The Revolution Has Come Although I received my formal

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