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Readings in African American Culture: Resistance, Liberation, and Identity from the 1600s to the 21st Century

Readings in African American Culture: Resistance, Liberation, and Identity from the 1600s to the 21st Century in Bloomington, MN
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Readings in African American Culture: Resistance, Liberation, and Identity from the 1600s to the 21st Century
helps readers understand and appreciate the black experience through readings that illustrate the lives, history, and intersecting cultures of African Americans and the development of a unique African American identity. Early chapters define African American culture and examine racism in America in relation to the existence of a dominant culture of white privilege. Readers learn about the history of West Africa before imperialism, the role of slavery in the suppression of the African culture, the loss of African identity, and the creation of racism in the making of America. They study the acculturation of Africans, and the post-Civil War migration which led to a widespread cultural revolution. They explore the origins of blues and jazz, Black religious traditions, the rise of Black nationalism, and the role of Black literary artists in the quest for community and identity. The book concludes with the civil rights movement and the on-going struggle for African Americans to become fully realized within American society. Rooted in an interdisciplinary approach,
Readings in African American Culture
is appropriate for courses on Black culture, and will be of interest in any course centered on the effects of race and culture on minority populations.
Angela Schwendiman
is a faculty member at Eastern Washington University where she teaches courses in African American cinema, family, culture, and social and intellectual thought. She earned her master's degree in college instruction with an emphasis in electronic media and film, and she continues to research and present lectures on topics related to the formation, definition, and redefinition of blackness, culture, identity, and gender in film.
helps readers understand and appreciate the black experience through readings that illustrate the lives, history, and intersecting cultures of African Americans and the development of a unique African American identity. Early chapters define African American culture and examine racism in America in relation to the existence of a dominant culture of white privilege. Readers learn about the history of West Africa before imperialism, the role of slavery in the suppression of the African culture, the loss of African identity, and the creation of racism in the making of America. They study the acculturation of Africans, and the post-Civil War migration which led to a widespread cultural revolution. They explore the origins of blues and jazz, Black religious traditions, the rise of Black nationalism, and the role of Black literary artists in the quest for community and identity. The book concludes with the civil rights movement and the on-going struggle for African Americans to become fully realized within American society. Rooted in an interdisciplinary approach,
Readings in African American Culture
is appropriate for courses on Black culture, and will be of interest in any course centered on the effects of race and culture on minority populations.
Angela Schwendiman
is a faculty member at Eastern Washington University where she teaches courses in African American cinema, family, culture, and social and intellectual thought. She earned her master's degree in college instruction with an emphasis in electronic media and film, and she continues to research and present lectures on topics related to the formation, definition, and redefinition of blackness, culture, identity, and gender in film.