Black History Month Summary

Improved Essays
Hoosier Hills Chapter partners with Blacks in Governement (BIG) for Black History Awareness Month Luncheon

On February 23, 2017, the FEW partnered with the Blacks in Governement (BIG), to host a luncheon at Club Lakeview to celebrate Black History Month.
Dr. Audrey T. McCluskey, a professor emerita of a professor emerita of African American and African Diaspora Studies, former Director of the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center, and former Director of the Black Film Center/Archive at Indiana University –Bloomington was our guest speaker.
Dr. McCluskey has published five books, dealing with Black film history and culture, and the history of education focusing on Black women. Her latest book, which is available on Amazon, is titled: “A Forgotten

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Laura Wexler the author of “Fire in a Canebrake” gives a very detailed nonfictional narrative of an event which is proclaimed to be the last mass lynching in American history. Wexler shines some light on the part of American history that isn’t talked about as much, the Civil Rights era. The author captivates the thin line of racial tension as well as racial ignorance that can be felt throughout everyday life in most rural cities in the south. The book takes place in Monroe, Georgia, a rural city that is roughly forty miles east of Atlanta. The city of Monroe from what Wexler has written is no different than any other rural town in America in 1946.…

    • 1266 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Researchers have long lamented the scarcity of primary sources for information about the pre–Civil War lives of African Americans. Noted historian and host of the PBS genealogy series Finding Your Roots, Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr.,…

    • 226 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Understanding our history and political background as it revolves around the problem of black studies, we can hopefully move forward to stop history from repeating itself.…

    • 1146 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hattie Mcdaniel Biography

    • 669 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Hattie McDaniel As known as a great African-American Actress, Singer- Songwriter, Hattie McDaniel was a great woman who paved a way for several other African American entertainers in her time. During the rapid growth of the film industry, Hattie McDaniel was a woman of visionary that took the industry under her wings and evolved into a idealists to the media industry. Hattie McDaniel was born in Wichita, Kansas on June 10, 1893; she was her parents' 13th child. Her father, Henry, was a Civil War veteran who suffered greatly from war injuries and had a difficult time with manual labor her mother, Susan Holbert, did domestic work.…

    • 669 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Tenth Anniversary On the tenth anniversary of the murder of one of the biggest influences on racial equality, Martin Luther King Jr, an article written by Cesar Chavez was published in a religious magazine, this article talks definitively about nonviolent resistance and it’s opposite, resistance through violence. Cesar Chavez reaches his point on nonviolence being the best possible way to succeed in protests by writing in a certain way that allows everyone to understand his points. His article also follows a compare and contrast structure between violence and nonviolence that leaves the audience with a feeling of certainty and he persuades the audience using a confident and appealing tone. The way he crafted his article creates a undeniable…

    • 842 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Washington and Du Bois both wrote during the 20th century when black people were just were beginning to try and fight for civil rights. They were two sides of the same coin when it came to decided what was the best approach for black people to begin this movement towards equality. Booker T. Washington believed that if we showed ourselves to be productive members of society and achieve economic independence that it would lead to true equality, so for right now we should set aside needs for civil rights. On the other hand W.E.B. Du Bois believed that it needed to happen much sooner than later and they both had their own reasons for why they thought they were right. To begin with Washington he gave several ideas as to why he believes patience…

    • 995 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    New Negroes Analysis

    • 1736 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Urbanization and industry transformed Midwest from agricultural to urbanized economies with trading hubs in cities like Chicago. This transformation from rural to urban sparked the Great Migration, a mass movement of African Americans from the South to industrialized cities in the North. This influx of African American communities challenged the existing racial constructs in the metropolis and gave rise to new socially constructed identities and means of self-expression. Davarian L. Baldwin examines these identities and expressions in Chicago’s New Negroes: Modernity, The Great Migration, & Black Urban Life published by The University of North Carolina Press. Baldwin argues Chicago’s “New Negroes” invested their intellectual and economic…

    • 1736 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    These three boys beat the odds! The Authors Drs. George Jenkins, Rameck Hunt, and Sampson Davis with Sharon M. Draper wrote the memoir called We Beat The Streets. George, Rameck, and Sampson did things that their surroundings weren’t “capable” of doing or didn’t have the willingness to do it. They all became doctors.…

    • 1005 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Critiquing those who label the preservation of African American knowledge and culture as racist, he reiterates his commitment to the struggle for black liberation on the basis of equality, not assimilation that he believes would jeopardize the survival of African Americans—their cultural and historical forms of expression, and their distinct physical African features. Du Bois is concerned that the race would commit “racial suicide” by working narrowly toward integration and assimilation. The conservation of black traditions also serves as the vital connector to Africa, its newly independent nations and the people that are still struggling for their liberation. Addressing his audience during the “Year of Africa,” Du Bois shifts his focus to…

    • 941 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    NAACP History

    • 874 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The NAACP was established Feb 12 1909. The NAACP is the country's most seasoned, biggest and most generally perceived grassroots-based social liberties association. Its more than half-million individuals and supporters all through the United States and the world are the head advocates for social liberties in their groups, crusading for equivalent open door and leading voter preparation. In 1909, the nation was still staggered from a race uproar the prior year in Springfield, Illinois, the city in which Lincoln had once lived. Eight blacks were executed and handfuls harmed as crowds of whites rampaged through the dark group decimating homes, property, and organizations, constraining thousands to escape.…

    • 874 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The first section of the book, which is composed of the first chapter, is an explanation of why the Birmingham Campaign- referred to as “the negro revolution” by King, presumably because the word “negro” carried a different connotation than it does now. The first chapter, titled The Negro Revolution- Why 1963, is- as stated above-an explanation of why the Birmingham Campaign occurred in the year of 1963, of all times; in the chapter, King explains that the driving forces behind the sudden, in King’s words, lightning-like revolution and the answer to the question of “Why now? Why not wait?” directed at African-Americans fighting for their civil rights lies in the disillusionment felt by African-Americans across the nation when the 1954 Supreme…

    • 1354 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Module Code: CRM3500 Module Name: Violent Crime: Violence, Sex & Punishment Module Leader: Emma Milne Student Number: M00549909 Assignment Title: Book Review: We Real Cool: Black Men and Masculinity. Department of Criminology & Sociology School of Law Book Review: We Real Cool: Black men and Masculinity by Bell Hooks.…

    • 1788 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The committee has been presented with various challenges to meet consistently. The struggled to meet is compounded with not just our day to day responsibilities and expectations. Additionally, many of you, your time has been hijacked to support CORE project and the various training associated it with this project. Many of you know the importance of Black History and many of you know the importance of the representation of the Black Community.…

    • 380 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Annotated Bibliography Ahmed, Sarah. “A Phenomenology of Whiteness.” Feminist Theory. 8.2 (2007): 149-68.…

    • 1160 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Black Lives Matter is a movement that campaigns against institutional racism and brutality toward black people. It stands apart from previous movements advocating for equal treatment of the black community because it includes and even highlights the fringe groups like LGBT people, women, and the disabled. This type of intersectionality underscores the commitment the movement has to advocating on the behalf of all black people. This social movement is unique in another way as well because it uses social media as its main way of creating awareness, organizing, and promoting social change. Social movements rely mainly on a groups ability to share grievances and ability to organize.…

    • 822 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays