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African-American Odyssey Combined Edition

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ISBN-10: 0130977969

ISBN-13: 9780130977960

Edition: 2nd 2003 (Revised)

Authors: Darlene Clark Hine, William C. Hine, Stanley Harrold

List price: $82.00
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For one/two-semester, undergraduate courses in African-American History, African-American Studies, and United States History. Written by leading scholars, The African-American Odyssey is a clear and comprehensive narrative of African-American history, from its African roots to the 21st century. This text places African-American history at the center, and in the context, of American History. Biographical profiles, documents, art, a Living Word CD, and the Companion Website dramatize the narrative and illuminate key personalities, events, and issues that shaped African-American history.
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Book details

List price: $82.00
Edition: 2nd
Copyright year: 2003
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication date: 3/8/2002
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 665
Size: 9.00" wide x 11.00" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 3.740
Language: English

Darlene Clark Hine was born in Morley, Missouri on February 7, 1947. She received a BA from Roosevelt University in 1968 and a MA and PhD from Kent State University in 1970 and 1975, respectively. She is considered a leading historian of the African American experience who helped found the field of black women's history. She has taught at South Carolina State College, Purdue University, and Michigan State University. She has written numerous books including Black Victory: The Rise and Fall of the White Primary in Texas; When the Truth Is Told: Black Women's Community and Culture in Indiana, 1875-1950; Black Women in White: Racial Conflict and Cooperation in the Nursing Profession,…    

Stanley Harrold is professor of history at South Carolina State University.

Becoming African American
Africa
Middle Passage
Black People in Colonial North America, 1526-1763
Rising Expectations: African Americans and the Struggle for Independence, 1763-1783
African Americans in the New Nation, 1783-1820
Slavery, Abolition, and the Quest for Freedom: The Coming of the Civil War, 1793-1861
Life in the Cotton Kingdom
Free Black People in Antebellum America
Opposition to Slavery, 1800-1833
Let Your Motto Be Resistance, 1833-1850
"And Black People Were at the Heart of It": The United States Disunites over Slavery
The Civil War, Emancipation, and Black Reconstruction: The Second American Revolution
Liberation: African Americans and the Civil War
The Meaning of Freedom: The Promise of Reconstruction, 1865-1868
The Meaning of Freedom: The Failure of Reconstruction
Searching for Safe Spaces
White Supremacy Triumphant: African Americans in the South in the Late Nineteenth Century
Black Southerners Challenge White Supremacy
Conciliation, Agitation, and Migration: African Americans in the Early Twentieth Century
African Americans and the 1920s
The Great Depression and World War II
The Great Depression and The New Deal
Black Culture and Society in the 1930s and 1940s
The World War II Era and Seeds of a Revolution
The Black Revolution
The Freedom Movement, 1954-1965
The Struggle Continues, 1965-1980
Modern Black America, 1980 to Present
Epilogue: "A Nation Within a Nation"