John Hope FranklinVolgorde van de boeken (chronologisch)
2 januari 1915 – 25 maart 2009
John Hope Franklin was een vooraanstaand historicus wiens wetenschappelijke werk de Afro-Amerikaanse ervaring belichtte. Zijn geschriften doken diep in het historische traject van zwarte Amerikanen, waarbij hij hun reis van slavernij naar vrijheid met nauwgezet onderzoek en diepgaand inzicht in kaart bracht. Franklin bezat een opmerkelijk vermogen om complexe historische verhalen met duidelijkheid en diepgang over te brengen, en leverde belangrijke bijdragen aan het begrip van de Amerikaanse geschiedenis. Zijn nalatenschap ligt in zijn blijvende impact op de historische wetenschap en het publieke begrip.
The pre-eminent history of African-Americans is now available in two volumes. From slavery to Freedom charts the journey of African-Americans from their origins in the civilisations of Africa, through slavery in the Western Hemisphere, to their struggle for freedom in the West Indies, Latin America and the United States. Still featuring numerous primary and secondary source boxes, and even more richly illustrated than in previous editions, From Slavery to Freedom, 7/e maintains its status as one of the most important college textbooks in print.
UP FROM SLAVERY
The autobiography of Booker T. Washington is a startling portrait of one of the great Americans of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The illegitimate son of a white man and a Negro slave, Washington, a man who struggled for his education, would go on to struggle for the dignity of all his people in a hostile and alien society.
THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK
W.E.B. Du Bois's classic is a major sociological document and one of the momentous books in the mosaic of American literature. No other work has had greater influence on black thinking, and nowhere is the African-American's unique heritage and his kinship with all men so passionately described.
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN EX-COLORED MAN
Originally published anonymously, James Weldon Johnson's penetrating work is a remarkable human account of the life of black Americans in the early twentieth century and a profound interpretation of his feelings towards the white man and towards members of his own race. No other book touches with such understanding and objectivity on the phenomenon once called "passing" in a white society.
These three narratives, gathered together in Three Negro Classics, chronicle the remarkable evolution of African-American consciousness on both a personal and social level. Profound, intelligent, and insightful, they are as relevant today as they have ever been.