The Negro
The Negro is a book by W. E. B. Du Bois published in 1915 and released in electronic form by Project Gutenberg in 2011.[1] It is an overview of African-American history, tracing it as far back as the sub-Saharan cultures, including Great Zimbabwe, Ghana and Songhai, as well as covering the history of the slave trade and the history of Africans in the United States and the Caribbean.
Historians John Parker and Richard Rathbone call the book the "first serious attempt at a continent-wide history [of Africa]".[2]
See also
- Negro
References
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- W.E.B. Du Bois Boyhood Homesite
- Atlanta Conference of Negro Problems
- Atlanta Sociological Laboratory
- The Exhibit of American Negroes (1900)
- First Pan-African Conference (1900)
- Niagara Movement
- NAACP (co-founder)
- The Crisis magazine
- The Brownies' Book magazine
- Freedom newspaper
- Pan-African Congress
- Fisk University protest (1924–1925)
- W. E. B. Du Bois Memorial Centre for Pan African Culture (home, burial site, and memorial)
- Talented Tenth
- Color line
- Double consciousness
- The Suppression of the African Slave-trade to the United States of America (1894)
- The Study of the Negro Problems (1898)
- The Philadelphia Negro (1899)
- The Souls of Black Folk (1903)
- The Negro in the South (1907)
- John Brown (1909)
- The Negro (1915)
- Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil (1920)
- Black Reconstruction in America (1935)
- Dusk of Dawn (1940)
- "The Comet" (1920)
- Dark Princess (1928)
- Shirley Graham Du Bois (second wife)
- Yolande Du Bois (daughter)
- Encyclopedia Africana
- The Negro Problem (1903 book)
- W.E.B. Du Bois Clubs of America
- African American founding fathers of the United States
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