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121 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
  • 3rd side (hint)
This initital stage of feminism addressed the legal inequalities and women's sufferage issues in the late nineteenth century:___?
First Wave Feminism
A peer of Fedrick Douglass, this African American woman was a prominent preacher and abolitionist in the mid nineteenth century:__?
Sojouner Truth
This org. was founded in 1896 by some of the most prominent African American women of the time, such as Harriet Tubman, Ida B. Wells, and Francis E.W. Harper:___?
National Association of Colored Women
In a speech delivered in Akron, Ohio in 1851, Sojourner Truth declared this famous phrase, which is one of the founding philosophies of Black Feminism:__?
Aint I A Woman
She was chair of the Young Communist League in 1940 and, in accordance with the Smith Act she was deported in 1951 for advancing the ideas of Karl Marx"__?
Claudia Davis
Established in 1973 this org. focused on the "interconnectedness" of black humanity. It's members consisted of activists from the civil rights movement, the black power movement, and the feminist movement?
Black Feminist Organization
She was a Black Feminist, Lesbian, Activist, Poet who wrote, " The master's tools will never dismantle the masters house." She also wrote passionately about the "Power of the Erotic"?
Audre Lorde
Black Feminist Theory is founded upon the concept of "intersectionality." To that end, our working defintino of the Black Feminist Project is:__?
the theory of intersectionality that sexism, classism, racism and homophobia are linked.
Angela Davis is one of the leading figures in contemporary Black Feminism. Her current project aims to:__?
end the prisons and close them down. Get black abolitionist of prisons.
Liberal Structuralists call for what?
full employment
__ Market Institutions have contributed to the shattering of black society and the weakening of black cultural institutions.
Corporate
Black Nihilism, according to Cornel West is the:__?
black struggle and black survival and its relation to nihilistic threat. Meaningless, hoplessness, lovedness
The politics of 1)__ shuns the limelight. Instead, it stays on the ground among the toiling 2)__?
1) conversion
2) everyday people
According to Professor West Toni Morrison's novel, ___? is an example of a downtrodden people's attempt to love self and the community.
Beloved
Those who stress the behavioral aspects of black upward mobility focus on the: __?
self help programs
Black Nihilism leads to a life without meaning, 1)___? and 2)__?. It destroys both the individual and the self.
hope and love
In his discussion on the intensification of pleasure, Professor West writes, "in our way of life it (pleasure) involves comfort, convience and__?
sexual stimulus
___ clinical depression exists in significant pockets of black America.
Collective
New models of ___ black leadership must promote a politics of conversion.
group/collective
Nihilism is not overcome by arguments or analyses; it is tamed by ___ & ___?
love and care
When is a diaspora created?
a community of people have been forced away from their homeland
What is syncretic religions?
The fusion and/or combination of 'seemingly' different/contrary belief systems.
According to West African Cosmology these spirits are the guardians who advocate on behalf of the living:__?
The Ancestors
Enslaved Africans identified with Old Testament narrative:__?
Bible ( thought it was magic)
The counter clock-wise singing, dancing, and drumming in a circle where Africans honored their ancestors is called:__?
ring shout
The Ballot represents what?
the vote
the ballot was a means by which Afican Americans would have the same ___ as all other citizens in the US.
rights/ citizenship
Slaves were legally forbidden to ___, and therefore could not keep their families together.
marry
The Ballot represents what?
the vote
This figure published a pamplet in 1829 that was very critical of America as a Christian (slave holding) nation:?
David Walker
David Walker's Appeal, arguably the most radical of all anti-slavery documents, caused a great stir when it was published in September of 1829 with its call for slaves to revolt against their masters. David Walker, a free black originally from the South wrote, ". . .they want us for their slaves, and think nothing of murdering us. . . therefore, if there is an attempt made by us, kill or be killed. . . and believe this, that it is no more harm for you to kill a man who is trying to kill you, than it is for you to take a drink of water when thirsty." Even the outspoken William Lloyd Garrison objected to Walker's approach in an editorial about the Appeal.

The goal of the Appeal was to instill pride in its black readers and give hope that change would someday come. It spoke out against colonization, a popular movement that sought to move free blacks to a colony in Africa. America, Walker believed, belonged to all who helped build it. He went even further, stating, "America is more our country than it is the whites -- we have enriched it with our blood and tears." He then asked, "will they drive us from our property and homes, which we have earned with our blood?"

Copies of the Appeal were discovered in Savannah, Georgia, within weeks of its publication. Within several months copies were found from Virginia to Louisiana. Walker revised his Appeal. He died in August of 1830, shortly after publishing the third edition.
The Ballot represents what?
the vote
This figure organized a slave revolt on Harper's Ferry in October of 1859:?
John Brown
List and Describe three Civil War Amendments:?
1) 13th Abolishment of Slavery
2) 14th Rights of Citizenship
3) 15th Right to vote
the ballot was a means by which Afican Americans would have the same ___ as all other citizens in the US.
rights/ citizenship
the ballot was a means by which Afican Americans would have the same ___ as all other citizens in the US.
rights/ citizenship
The Ballot represents what?
the vote
Slaves were legally forbidden to ___, and therefore could not keep their families together.
marry
Slaves were legally forbidden to ___, and therefore could not keep their families together.
marry
"John Brown's Body" was the slave's tribute to the abolitionist John Brown, and the poet Julia Ward Howe wrote the lyrics to the song. An example of this familiar song of national identity was played in class; the title is the:__?
The Battle of the Hymm
the ballot was a means by which Afican Americans would have the same ___ as all other citizens in the US.
rights/ citizenship
Harlem Renaissance
Def: Artistic movement, Black Artistic Expression
Fig: A. Locke, L. Hughes, Z. Hurtson
Dis: “ New Negro” Post Reconstruction
The Harlem Renaissance was a period between World War I and the Great Depression when black artists and writers flourished in the United States. Critics and historians have assigned varying dates to the movement’s beginning and end, but most tend to agree that by 1917 there were signs of increased cultural activity among black artists in the Harlem section of New York City and that by the mid-1930s the movement had lost much of its original vigor. While Harlem was the definite epicenter of black culture during this period, and home to more blacks than any other urban area in the nation in the years after World War I, other cities, such as Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia, also fostered similar but smaller communities of black artists.

The movement came about for a number of reasons. Between 1890 and 1920, the near collapse of the southern agricultural economy, coupled with a labor shortage in the north, prompted about two million blacks to migrate to northern cities in search of work. In addition, World War I had left an entire generation of African Americans asking why, when they had fought and many had died for their country, they were still afforded second-class status. By the end of the war, many northern American cities, such as Harlem, had large numbers of African Americans emboldened by new experiences and better paychecks, energized by the possibility of change. A number of black intellectuals, such as W. E. B. Du Bois and Alain Locke, were making it clear that the time had come for white America to take notice of the achievements of African-American artists and thinkers. The idea that whites might come to accept blacks if they were exposed to their artistic endeavors became a popular one.

To this end, magazines such as the Crisis, published by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and Opportunity featured the prose and poetry of Harlem Renaissance stars Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, Nella Larsen, and Zora Neale Hurston. Major New York-based publishing houses began to search for new black voices and print their poems, short stories, and novels. White intellectual society embraced these writers and supported— financially and through social contacts—their efforts to educate Americans about their race, culture, and heritage through their art. Ultimately, however, the financial backing began to run dry in the early 1930s with the collapse of the New York stock market and the ensuing worldwide economic depression. The Renaissance had run its course.
This figure published a pamplet in 1829 that was very critical of America as a Christian (slave holding) nation:?
David Walker
This figure organized a slave revolt on Harper's Ferry in October of 1859:?
John Brown
Slaves were legally forbidden to ___, and therefore could not keep their families together.
marry
Fannie Lou Hammer
MFDP, Reg. tried to get people to vote
- Grass Roots
-Rep in Gou’t
“Sick and Tired…”
This figure published a pamplet in 1829 that was very critical of America as a Christian (slave holding) nation:?
David Walker
This figure published a pamplet in 1829 that was very critical of America as a Christian (slave holding) nation:?
David Walker
This figure organized a slave revolt on Harper's Ferry in October of 1859:?
John Brown
List and Describe three Civil War Amendments:?
1) 13th Abolishment of Slavery
2) 14th Rights of Citizenship
3) 15th Right to vote
Bayard Rustin
-March on Washington
-“Architect”
-Non-violent philosophy (mlk)
-Openly gay ( used against him)
This figure organized a slave revolt on Harper's Ferry in October of 1859:?
John Brown
List and Describe three Civil War Amendments:?
1) 13th Abolishment of Slavery
2) 14th Rights of Citizenship
3) 15th Right to vote
"John Brown's Body" was the slave's tribute to the abolitionist John Brown, and the poet Julia Ward Howe wrote the lyrics to the song. An example of this familiar song of national identity was played in class; the title is the:__?
The Battle of the Hymm
List and Describe three Civil War Amendments:?
1) 13th Abolishment of Slavery
2) 14th Rights of Citizenship
3) 15th Right to vote
Harlem Renaissance
Def: Artistic movement, Black Artistic Expression
Fig: A. Locke, L. Hughes, Z. Hurtson
Dis: “ New Negro” Post Reconstruction
"John Brown's Body" was the slave's tribute to the abolitionist John Brown, and the poet Julia Ward Howe wrote the lyrics to the song. An example of this familiar song of national identity was played in class; the title is the:__?
The Battle of the Hymm
"John Brown's Body" was the slave's tribute to the abolitionist John Brown, and the poet Julia Ward Howe wrote the lyrics to the song. An example of this familiar song of national identity was played in class; the title is the:__?
The Battle of the Hymm
Harlem Renaissance
Def: Artistic movement, Black Artistic Expression
Fig: A. Locke, L. Hughes, Z. Hurtson
Dis: “ New Negro” Post Reconstruction
Harlem Renaissance
Def: Artistic movement, Black Artistic Expression
Fig: A. Locke, L. Hughes, Z. Hurtson
Dis: “ New Negro” Post Reconstruction
Fannie Lou Hammer
MFDF, Reg. tried to get people to vote
- Grass Roots
-Rep in Gou’t
“Sick and Tired…”
Bayard Rustin
-March on Washington
-“Architect”
-Non-violent philosophy (mlk)
-Openly gay ( used against him)
Fannie Lou Hammer
MFDF, Reg. tried to get people to vote
- Grass Roots
-Rep in Gou’t
“Sick and Tired…”
Fannie Lou Hammer
MFDF, Reg. tried to get people to vote
- Grass Roots
-Rep in Gou’t
“Sick and Tired…”
Bayard Rustin
-March on Washington
-“Architect”
-Non-violent philosophy (mlk)
-Openly gay ( used against him)
Bayard Rustin
-March on Washington
-“Architect”
-Non-violent philosophy (mlk)
-Openly gay ( used against him)
Ella Baker
Group leadership
Self Defense ( opposite of MLK)
SNCC Student nonviolent coordinating committee ( you have to write the whole thing out), NAACP
Grass Roots ( go from door to door to organize voting registration)
She believed in getting to the root of all problems
Tricia Rose
Deindustrialization- Jobs are taken out of the community.
Rap block- the Bronx in new York
What is a rap block – a specific region or area ( different regions)
Know about the blues block
HIV/ AIDS
Originally seen as a white gay male disease
Reagan ERA
STIGMA (There is a stigma attached to people with HIV/AIDS)
what is Dr. Jabir’s suggestion?
comprehensive healing strategy of creating caring communities
what is C. Cohen’s suggestion?
1. Social Services
2. Gay Identity
3. Aids Bureaucracy
4. Org. Gay Community of Color
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
This 20th century Black Nationalist inspired Rastafarianism with his philosophy of radical and economic independence?
Magic
This 20th century Black Nationalist inspired Rastafarianism with his philosophy of radical and economic independence?
Magic
This 20th century Black Nationalist inspired Rastafarianism with his philosophy of radical and economic independence?
Magic
When Africans were captured during the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade they were seperated by what?
Tribe and Language
The first slave shipment of "23 Be==Negars" landed in Jamestown, Virginia in what year?
1619
Rebellion were common aboard slave ships. What scholar said, "It was not enough to Break the Chains but it was neccessary to Steer the Ship?"
Vincent Harding
According to Yoruba Spirituality the Orishas aer a__?
Pantheon of Dieties
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals
This 20th century Black Nationalist inspired Rastafarianism with his philosophy of radical and economic independence?
Magic
This 20th century Black Nationalist inspired Rastafarianism with his philosophy of radical and economic independence?
Magic
The Great Awakening was a series of __? influenced by the preaching of George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards.
Revivals