African American Studies/Literature Resources Americans (University of Virginia) University of Michigan African American StudiesLinks. harlem Renaissance harlem Renaissance (IHAS) Literature and Life http://webpages.shepherd.edu/ltate/AfricanAmericanResources.html
Videos On African American Studies At Stanford University Dorothy is a harlem kindergarten teacher whisked off to follow the works, you maywish to consult Beginning Library Research on African American studies. http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/adams/shortcu/films/afamfilms.html
Extractions: Documentaries Feature Films Reference Works This is a selected list of films and videos which examine the historical, political and cultural development of African Americans in the United States. You may locate these and other titles by searching Socrates, the online catalog Call numbers beginning with ZFL designate films, those with ZVC indicate VHS videos, and ZVU indicates 3/4" videocassette ("betamax"). DVDs will have the call number ZDVD and circulate overnight to Stanford students, staff, and faculty. All titles are available in Green Library Media-Microtext Center for in-house use; however, faculty or instructors who wish to show a film or tape for educational purposes can arrange for outside viewing. Black Heritage (1969) focuses on the history of African people in the United States, slavery, the struggle for freedom, politics of the 20's, and the role of Black soldiers in World War II. Each film is 30 minutes long. Titles included in the Black Heritage series are (not all parts of the series are available): Black Heritage (ZFLc 9) The introduction to the series.
Powell's Books - Used, New, And Out Of Print Featured Titles in African American studiesBlack Heritage Page 31 of 33 next. BloodRelations Caribbean Immigrants and the harlem Community, 1900-1930 by http://www.powells.com/subsection/AfricanAmericanStudiesBlackHeritage.31.html
Extractions: English ENGL African American Literature Through the Harlem Renaissance ENGL African American Literature Since the Harlem Renaissance ENGL Major African American Authors Through the Harlem Renaissance ENGL Major African American Authors Since the Harlem Renaissance History HIST Islamic Civilization HIST Modern Islamic World HIST African Civilization HIST Special Topics in History HIST Islamic Egypt HIST Africa: Antiquity and Tradition HIST Africa: Continuity and Flux HIST Africa: Twentieth Century HIST United States Urban History HIST African American History HIST Civil Rights Movement in the United States Since 1930 Philosophy PHIL African American Philosophy Concentration II Concentration III 213 Mitchell Hall, Memphis, TN 38152
Afro-American Studies Black Women, Writing and Slavery African American Literature and American Law TheHarlem Renaissance Introduction to African American studies africanamerican http://kancrn.kckps.k12.ks.us/Harmon/breighm/afro4.html
African American Studies Women of the harlem Renaissance (ebook) Also in print PS153.N5 W33 1995. AfricanStudies Center - U. of Pennsylvania. African American Web Connection. http://www.middlebury.edu/~lib/africanamguide.html
Extractions: see the Article Index page for African American Studies SPECIALIZED JOURNALS AVAILABLE AT MIDDLEBURY Location and format: For online journals [M] indicates that Middlebury pays for a subscription. By publisher license agreements, these are restricted to Middlebury students, faculty, and staff. Titles not linked are either in print or on microform. For print publications current issues are in the reading room on the main floor of Starr Library; past years are in the bound periodicals section (both arranged alphabetically). See map for locations. Microform publications are either on microfilm (arranged by MF # ) or microfiche (arranged alphabetically). See map for location. Check the Midcat online catalog for more detailed information.
African American Studies Print Resources African American Women A Biographical Dictionary, E 185.96 .A45 African and BlackAmerican studies, DT 3 American Writers Before the harlem Renaissance Series http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/subjectareas/aas/aasprint.html
Extractions: Reference Sources This literature includes historical, economic, and political aspects of African- Americans as well as issues of education, family and culture. This is a selective list of available resources on African- American Studies in the John Henrik Clarke Africana Library. It is to be used to find more extensive material and should serve as a point of departure. The African-American Mosaic: A Library of Congress Resource Guide for the Study of Black History and Culture . 1993. Ref./Z/1361/N39/L47x/1993 Afro-American Reference: An Annotated Bibliography of Selected Resources . 1985. Ref./Z/1361/N39/D27 Up-to-date general bibliography covering "full interdisciplinary subject range of reference-type materials." Few journal articles. Bibliographic Guide to Black Studies . 1975- . Ref./Z/1361/N39/N53 Annual acquisitions of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Arranged alphabetically and includes subject headings, author and title entries.
UCF: African American Studies Nineteenth Century African American Expatriatism University Club Movement UCFWomen'sStudies Bluestocking Luncheon Vechten and the harlem Renaissance Polk http://www.cas.ucf.edu/africanamericanstudies/index.php?URL=davidson
Rutgers University Press A E (New Books Added Daily) African American studies, in Paris Subtitle AfricanAmerican Painters and Subtitle A Revisionist harlem Renaissance Anthology http://rutgerspress.rutgers.edu/acatalog/__African_American_Studies_194.html
African American Studies Program a course on the harlem/Black Renaissance. Critical Race Feminism and African AmericanPolitical Thought. is an assistant professor of communication studies. http://www.macalester.edu/aas/faculty.html
Extractions: Faculty Kendrick Brown , assistant professor of psychology, teaches courses related to the expressions and experiences of racial prejudice and racism, the influence of skin tone bias on African Americans and intergroup contact as a means of producing positive racial attitudes. His publications include: Skin Tone and Racial Identity Among African Americans: A Theoretical and Research Framework and Mental Health: The Importance of Race, Ethnicity and Culture. Mahmoud El-Kati , lecturer in history, specializes in African American history since World War II and is interested in ethnicity in the U.S. during the 20th century. He is developing a course on the Harlem/Black Renaissance. Duchess Harris , assistant professor of political science and coordinator, teaches Race, Ethnicity and Politics; Critical Race Feminism and African American Political Thought. Her research interests include critical race theory and Black feminist activism from 1960 to the present. Leola Johnson is an assistant professor of communication studies. Her teaching and research interests include representations of African Americans and women in mass media as well as hip-hop culture and rap music.
Black History Links Site offering social studies and issues in black history. African American men andwomen who have contributed to the advancement of harlem, 19001940 Exhibition. http://www.newport-news.va.us/library/Blackhistlinks.htm
Extractions: LINKS FOR BLACK HISTORY MONTH Links to key sites from the Department of State http://usinfo.state.gov/usa/blackhis/sites.htm African American literature and history History, biographies, lesson plans and bibliographies http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/afroamer.htm African American Inventors Database Search by name or invention. No biographical information http://www.detroit.lib.mi.us/glptc/aaid/index.asp African American Inventors Series List of African American inventors and their invention. No biographical information. http://www.ehhs.cmich.edu/~rlandrum/ AFRO-American almanac http://toptags.com/aama/ American Studies Web Bibliography of web-based resources in the field of American studies http://cfdev.georgetown.edu/cndls/asw/ Awesome Library - African-American links Site offering social studies and issues in black history http://www.awesomelibrary.org/Classroom/Social_Studies/Multicultural/African_American.html Black History from Tampa Bay Online Site offering related links http://tampabayonline.net/reports/black/related.htm
VoS - Voice Of The Shuttle Black Women's Narrative from Slavery to the harlem Renaissance. The harlem Renaissance. AfricanAmerican studies (American studies Electronic Crossroads). http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=2721
African American Studies - SLCC Library Services harlem Renaissance, 19191937. US Census Bureau. Black History Quest African-AmericanHistory, Culture, and Black studies Resources. http://www.stlcc.cc.mo.us/lsdocs/AfricanAmer.html
Extractions: "An on-line presentation of the African in America. A historical perspective of a nation, its people, and its cultural evolution. From the beginning of the slave trade through the Civil Rights movement, to the present." Sections include Biographies, E-Books, Historical Documents, Historical Events, Folk Tales, and more.
African American Studies Research Guide AfroAmerican Writers from the harlem Renaissance to 1940 (DLB) PS 153 African AmericanStudies materials may be found throughout the library stacks, depending http://www.mtholyoke.edu/lits/library/guides/africanamerican.shtml
Extractions: Important Scope Note: The following sources provide merely an introduction to research in African American Studies. They are not intended to be comprehensive but rather a starting point. Because African American Studies usually involves interdisciplinary research, it also will be useful to consult additional subject guides, such as "English Language and Literature," "History, " or "Psychology." For help selecting the best resources talk with a Reference Librarian. History and Culture African American Women: A Biographical Dictionary Nearly 300 biographies of African American women throughout history. Limited bibliographies and an appendix of "career categories" are included.
Randall Library African American Studies Resources Almanac Information on all aspects of African American studies. N5 G29 1999 AfricanAmerican Writers REF PS153 Writers Before the harlem Renaissance (Dictionary http://library.uncwil.edu/subject/africanamerican.html
Extractions: Off Campus Access ... African American Studies Minor Articles These databases can be used to find citations to articles in journals, magazines and newspapers. Some of the databases will provide the full-text of the articles. Database Description Full text Academic Search Full Text Elite Scholarly journals covering a wide range of subjects. EBSCOhost (indexing 1984-current; full text 1990-current) Yes African-American Poetry African-American poets in the late 18th and 19th centuries. (1750-1900) Yes Citations and abstracts from journals, books, dissertations about history and culture of the U.S. and Canada. (1964-current) No Anthropological Index Online Citations to anthropology articles with search engine. (1957-current) No Anthropological Literature Citations to anthropology and archaeology, some art history, demography, economics, psychology, and religious studies. (19th cen.-current) No EBSCOhost Electronic Journals Service (EJS) Database of full text scholarly e-journals. Includes a search engine for finding articles.
African American Studies African American studies 249. African American Popular Music. African American studies395A. The harlem Renaissance. African American studies s19. Spike Lee. http://www.bates.edu/catalog97-98/aas.html
Extractions: Professors Turlish (English), Branham (Rhetoric)(on leave, winter semester and Short Term), and Taylor (English); Associate Professors Kessler (Political Science), Brinkley (Sociology and Women's Studies), Creighton (History)(on leave, winter semester), Bruce (Religion), Fra-Molinero (Spanish), Eames (Anthropology), Nero (Rhetoric), Chair, and Carnegie (Anthropology); Assistant Professors Chin (English), Hill (Political Science), Jensen (History), Williams (Music and African American Studies), and Rivers (Political Science); Mr. Pope.L (Theater) African American studies is an interdisciplinary program designed to enrich knowledge of the experience of African Americans from the past to the present, both within and beyond the United States. Attention is given to race as a critical tool of analysis for explaining the allocation of economic resources, the formation of personal and group identity, and the changing nature of political behavior. Study of African American experiences provides insight into secular cultural practices, intellectual traditions, religious doctrines and practices, and social institutions with attention to issues of class, gender, ethnicity, and sexual orientation. Major requirements: Students must complete eleven courses and a thesis. Students must complete either African American Studies 457 or African American Studies 458 (senior thesis). In addition students should fulfill the following requirements from the courses approved for the major: one course must have an experiential component; one course must be a junior-senior seminar.
American Ethnic Studies History, Revista InterAmericana, American studies Today (UK Grants for research onthe African American woman, a of Black Artists in the harlem Renaissance Era http://depts.washington.edu/aes/faculty/jwalter.html
Extractions: jcwalter@u.washington.edu Ph.D. University of Maine, 1972 Transforming the Curriculum: Ethnic Studies and Women's Studies . Co-edited and co-authored with Johnnella E. Butler. Albany: SUNY Press, 1991. The Harlem Fox: J. Raymond Jones and Tammany, 1920-1970 . Albany: SUNY Press, 1989. *Winner of a 1990 American Book Award Professor Walter is the author of 26 articles and more than 100 reviews in such journals as The Journal of American History The Georgia Historical Quarterly The Western Historical Quarterly The Journal of African Americans in New York Life and History Revista Inter-Americana American Studies Today (U.K.), and the Seattle Times . He has been the recipient of a number of Mellon Research Grants for research on the African American woman, a Taft Research Fellowship for his work on "White Patronage of Black Artists in the Harlem Renaissance Era," among other awards. He received a Ford Foundation Grant for the oral history project "African American Athletes and the Color Line." Walter has lectured abroad at the John F. Kennedy American Studies Institute for the Free University of Berlin, Germany, and most recently (1999) at Liverpool John Moores University, England, and at the United States Embassy, London, U.K.
Extractions: Dr. William W. Sales, Jr., Chair History of the Department The Department of African American Studies was founded in 1970 as the Center for Black Studies. As such it was the first such academic center in higher education in New Jersey and one of the earliest in the entire United States. Originally the Center was established as a semi-autonomous degree-granting unit of the University with the responsibility of offering two degrees, a B.A. in Black Culture and a B.S. in Black Community Studies. Subsequently in cooperation with the school of education, an M.A. in Education with a concentration in Black Studies was established. In 1980 the two undergraduate degrees were consolidated into a B.A. in African American Studies. The guiding philosophy of the Center for Black Studies as the first Director, Dr. George Jackson articulated it, remains that of the present African American Studies Department. Dr. Jackson pointed out that: Scholars are needed (to confront the problems created by racism) who are trained to see the whole problem, not pieces of it. Moreover, freedom must occur within the context of twentieth century science and technology, but from persons who are committed to humanistic application of scientific and sociological principles the curriculum will integrate the humanities with all other subjects, [and] will be taught from the Black Perspective-which to be meaningful must be humanistic by definition
African American Studies The harlem Renaissance and Beyond Literary Biographies of 100 Black Women Writers,1900 African American Review Callaloo Journal of Black studies Journal of http://www.fsu.edu/library/search/toolkits/african_american_studies.shtml
Extractions: Specific titles on all aspects of the African American experience may be found by using . All book titles are assigned Library of Congress Subject Headings, which indicate the focus of the book. They are located on first floor of Strozier Library near the Reference Desk. Subject headings to consider are "Blacks" and "African Americans."