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The Debate on Black Civil Rights in America

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This volume in the Issues in Historiography series examines the changing scholarly debate on individuals and events in African American history from the 1890s to the present. It highlights how over...
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  • 16 March 2006
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Once a neglected area, African American history is now the subject of extensive scholarly research. The Debate on Black Civil Rights in America is the first full-length study to examine the changing academic debate on developments in African American history from the 1890s to the present. It provides a critical historiographical review of the very latest thinking and explains how and why research and discourse have evolved in the ways that they have.

Individual chapters focus on particular periods in African American history from the spread of racial segregation in the 1890s through to the postwar Civil Rights Movement and the Black Power Movement of the sixties and seventies. The concluding chapters address the modern day black experience and the images of African Americans in popular culture.

Appraising both the existing scholarship and the changing philosophy of the historical profession, this work will be invaluable to scholars, students and general readers alike.

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Price: $23.95
Pages: 216
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Issues in Historiography
Publication Date: 16 March 2006
ISBN: 9780719067617
Format: Paperback
BISACs: Historiography, History of the Americas
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Kevern Verney is a Reader in History at Edge Hill College of Higher Education

General Editor’s Forword
Preface
Introduction
1. Segregation and Accommodation, 1895-1915
2. The Great Migration and the ‘New Negro’, 1915-1930
3. The Great Depression and the Second World War, 1930-1945
4. The Post-war Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1965
5. Malcolm X and Black Power, 1960-1980
6. The New Conservatism, 1980-2002
7. African Americans and U. S. Popular Culture, 1895-2002
Conclusion
Guidance on Further Reading