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    After the world war one and somewhere between the 1930`s, a great cultural event happened in America. The jazz era also known as the Harlem Renaissance had a lot of people flocking to Harlem, New York. According to Richard Wormser from PBS, he states Harlem was considered the mecca to which black writers, artist, musicians, photographers, poets, and scholars traveled. Many came to express their talents freely, and escape oppression in the south and the caste system. It was during this time that…

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    Two great African-American leaders of the 19th and 20th century were W.E.B DuBois and Booker T. Washington. These two men are similar as they both want educational equality for African-Americans. Washington wants rational education for African-Americans, but to continue living separately from whites. Though DuBois thinks that African-Americans should have the best education along side with their equal rights. Booker T. Washington was born April 5,1856 as a slave on a small farm in West Virginia…

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    Back in the day, when slavery was still happening, people from different years had their own opinion and versions of slavery. Over the years, these opinions and versions of those peoples had brought controversies all over the whole. Which in one way or another had divided people’s point of view. Not to mention that those people opinions and versions of the circumstances are their own versions, in which all they said are right, from their own experiences. These two people are best known for…

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    African-American Museum

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    Andrea Burns book From Store Front to Monument: Tracing the Public History of the Black Museum Movement is a fascinating interpretation of the development of the African- American Museums. Her argument that in order to understand the development of African- American Museums it is important to first look at where these museums were built and the goals in which the embodied; “Understanding the origins of this evolution helps us contextualize and historicize black public history, from its modest…

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    Abstract The present study attempts to analyses selected works of the two eminent American authors on whom very little research work seems to have been undertaken through the angle of Black aesthetics. Richard Wright and Toni Morrison novelists are an effort to bring out the central theme of the Black American experience in an unjust society like America. Compare and contrast the ways that these two American writers have conceived the relationship between racial oppression (black) and the…

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    W. E. B Dubois Philosophy

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    W.E.B Dubois African American Philosopher WEB Dubois is an african american philosopher who was born free. Dubois was highly educated and the co-founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He’s well known as a historian and philosopher, as a philosopher Dubois addresses the issues about race. Dubois summarizes the social reality of america stating that, “No universal selfishness can bring social good to all or restore america’s democracy” (p.11). DuBois believes…

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    lustrator and author, Ezra Jack Keats, promoted a form of representation not common in his era. His book The Snowy Day, published in 1962, accomplishes the representation of a realistic urban setting by depicting an African American child as the protagonist. Yet, Keats accomplishes much more than racial diversity in his illustrations. The Snowy Day was awarded the Caldecott Medal in 1963. The Caldecott Medal praises illustrations and The Snowy Day is remembered today as one of the most important…

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    James Baldwin was an African American novelist born in 1924, and passed away in 1987. He wrote about racial, social, and class distinctions, during an important time of history when these topics were finally being more widely discussed. Though he is an African-American writer, one may think Baldwin specifically wrote about racial, social, and class distinctions in solely America, but he actually travels over the world to tackle these issues. One of his works that covers those issues abroad is A…

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    Leopold Seder Senghor, first Senegalese president, poet and politician and one of the pioneers in the Pan-African philosophical movement known as Negritude. He got a scholarship in 1925 and went to college in Paris. During his college years, he met Aime Cesaire and Leon Damas and together they established the negritude movement. In 1955 he is elected secretary of state of the French presidency before becoming in 1960 the first Senegalese president until 1980. Senghor promotes a quest for the…

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    Prior to, and even during the African-American Civil Rights Movement of 1954-1968 , the United States of America saw a separation between their Blacks and Whites, as a result of the practice of the Jim Crow Laws which promoted the idea that the Blacks were lesser than the White . This saw the rise of two prominent African-American Civil Rights activists, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X. Though the two activists had a common goal (which was racial equality), their ideas of equality and…

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