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1963221701963. Civil Rights African American Slavery and Abolition A complete set of the Adventures in Negro History educational LP series created to promote Black history and culture during the Civil Rights era through dramatized narration and scholarly commentary. Adventures in Negro History: Volumes I-III. Highlight Radio Productions 1963 1966 1969. Three original 12-inch 33⅓ rpm vinyl LPs each record housed in original illustrated jacket. Commissioned by Pepsi-Cola and produced by the Chicago-based Highlight Radio Productions this project brought together historians actors and community leaders in an accessible audio-driven public history format. Each volume explores a distinct theme in African American experience with powerful graphic covers and scholarly liner notes by eminent historians John Hope Franklin and Elsie M. Lewis.<br /> <br /> 1 Volume I: Adventures in Negro History 1963. Illustrated in stark black and white the cover features a stylized portrait of a bound enslaved man visually evoking the violent conditions of enslavement and the struggle for freedom. The back cover provides capsule biographies of pivotal figures including Estevanico Crispus Attucks and W.E.B. Du Bois as well as dramatizations of "Douglass!" and "Pinchback!" The LP includes dramatized reenactments written and directed by Ossie Davis and is voiced by Ruby Dee Godfrey Cambridge Brock Peters and Roy Glenn. The liner text opens: "We cannot afford to let the story of Negro Americans-who they were how they lived what they did-go untold. This is a job that needs doing in all the classrooms of America." The tone is urgent and pedagogical designed to be played in schools libraries and community centers. <br /> <br /> 2 Volume II: The Frederick Douglass Years 1817-1895 1966.With a bold blue cover echoing the design of Volume I this LP focuses entirely on Douglass's life from enslavement to abolitionist leader. A full panel on the reverse contains the essay What the Douglass Years Mean to America by John Hope Franklin then Professor of American History at the University of Chicago. Franklin writes: "The Frederick Douglass story is the story of America in the nineteenth century. it is the story of man's struggle for justice and liberty in a society often committed more to self-interest than to high principle." The dramatizations include scenes from Douglass's escape from slavery his debates with white abolitionists and his role during Reconstruction. The same acclaimed voice cast from Volume I returns. <br /> <br /> 3 Volume III: The Afro-American's Quest for Education - A Black Odyssey 1969.This volume shifts focus to the historical struggle for Black educational access from slavery through desegregation. The cover rendered in burnt sienna and black features a graphic portrait of a bearded elder flanked by line drawings of teachers students and historic Black institutions. On the verso Dr. Elsie M. Lewis Professor of History at Howard University contributes a major essay declaring: "No phase of the American Negro's history is more crucial more dramatic or more moving than his long dogged quest for education." Her commentary frames education as both a right and revolutionary act for African Americans. Like earlier entries Volume III blends narrative scenes with documentary-style commentary. <br /> <br /> All three LPs are in very good condition with minor edge wear to sleeves. Vinyl appears clean with no visible scratches. These records were not mass-marketed and were distributed largely through educational and community networks making complete sets scarce. unknown
Mm 285x310 Catalogo della mostra di Milano, Mudec - Museo delle culture, 26 marzo - 30 agosto 2015. Volume cartonato, legatura editoriale in mezza tela, piatto posteriore in tela, 339 pagine, numerosissime illustrazioni a colori e in bianco e nero nel testo. Libro in condizioni di nuovo - brand new in original shrinkwrap. SPEDIZIONE IN 24 ORE DALLA CONFERMA DELL'ORDINE.
119p. + Plus frontis and full page photographs. Penciled ownership of Mrs. William A. Kump, 1917. 12mo. Original full printed wraps, damp stained at top edge. AFRICA/2
1890196721890. Barrows Isabel C. ed. First Mohonk Conference on the Negro Question Held at Lake Mohonk Ulster County New York June 4 5 6 1890 1890 records one of the earliest organized national discussions among white reformers politicians and intellectuals addressing the status of African Americans in the decades following Reconstruction. Convened at a moment when Black political rights were being systematically dismantled across the South through disenfranchisement and violence the conference brought together predominantly white Northern and Southern participants to debate labor education and civil status. The proceedings include the intervention of Reconstruction advocate Albion W. Tourgée whose address "The Negro's View of the Race Problem" directly challenged the exclusion of Black voices and concluded with a proposed resolution that failed to gain support. Statements within the conference reflect prevailing racial barriers including the observation that in Philadelphia "a colored man may carry mortar up a ladder but he is not allowed to lay the bricks" underscoring systemic exclusion from skilled labor and economic advancement.<br /> <br /> Barrows Isabel C. ed. First Mohonk Conference on the Negro Question Held at Lake Mohonk Ulster County New York June 4 5 6 1890. Boston: Geo. H. Ellis 1890. Softcover pamphlet format 142 pages measuring approximately 24 cm. Original front cover preserved and laid in with a color facsimile wrapper supplied for protection. Text printed as conference proceedings compiling speeches discussions and resolutions delivered across the three-day meeting.<br /> <br /> Produced during the consolidation of Jim Crow policies and the retreat from Reconstruction-era protections this document provides direct evidence of how white-led reform movements framed and debated Black citizenship at the national level. The absence of substantive Black participation alongside Tourgée's protest highlights tensions between advocacy and paternalism within late nineteenth-century reform discourse. As a printed record of policy-oriented discussion the volume supports research into labor exclusion education policy and the ideological foundations of segregation-era governance. Minor staining to lower margins; otherwise very good condition. unknown
1947223891947. Johnson John H. founder. Negro Digest 1947-1969 documents African American political thought literary production and cultural criticism across the postwar period the Civil Rights Movement and the emergence of the Black Arts Movement. Published as a digest format periodical the magazine brought together essays fiction journalism and commentary by leading Black writers and public intellectuals establishing a widely circulated forum for debate on race identity labor international politics and the arts. The issues in this archive include contributions by figures such as LeRoi Jones Alice Childress C. Eric Lincoln Arna Bontemps and Barbara Ann Teer supporting research into African American intellectual history Black theater and mid twentieth century print culture.<br /> <br /> Negro Digest. Chicago: Johnson Publishing Company 1947-1969. Archive of six issues in printed wrappers each approximately 7.5 x 5.5 inches. Issues included are: 1 January 1947 with articles including Richard Wright's "How Jim Crow Feels" Eleanor Roosevelt's contributions and "How Jackie Robinson Took It"; 2 February 1951 featuring "I Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Fighter" by Lillie Brooks and articles by Walter White and Roi Ottley; 3 November 1961 including "The New Black Renaissance" by Arna Bontemps and commentary by Duke Ellington and C. Eric Lincoln; 4 December 1962 featuring "The Menace of Mediocrity" by C. Eric Lincoln and essays on African American urban life and global politics; 5 April 1967 Second Annual Theater Issue including LeRoi Jones's play Slave Ship and essays by Alice Childress Ronald Milner and others on Black theater and performance; 6 April 1969 Annual Report on Black Theater in America with contributions by Barbara Ann Teer Woodie King Jr. and a roundtable including Sam Greenlee and Hoyt W. Fuller. The issues include essays reportage literary excerpts and visual material documenting cultural and political developments.<br /> <br /> Published during a period of expanding Black media and activism Negro Digest functioned as a central platform connecting literary production with political discourse tracing shifts from integrationist arguments in the postwar years to the cultural nationalism and artistic experimentation of the late 1960s. The inclusion of theater-focused issues reflects the increasing importance of performance as a site of political expression within the Black Arts Movement while earlier issues address labor segregation and international Black identity. Light edge wear and rubbing particularly to earlier issues; covers remain vibrant with pages clean and intact; overall very good condition. This archive provides sustained documentation of African American intellectual and cultural life across a critical period of twentieth century history. unknown
1941211681941. Woodson Carter G. The Negro History Bulletin. These mid-twentieth century periodicals document the institutionalization of African American historical scholarship and pedagogy under the leadership of Carter G. Woodson whose work established Black history as a formal field of study in the United States. Issued between 1941 and 1949 these issues provide primary evidence of how African American history was researched interpreted and disseminated during a period shaped by World War II migration and ongoing struggles for civil rights. Founded in 1937 at the urging of Mary McLeod Bethune the Negro History Bulletin functioned as an educational tool for teachers and students presenting accessible scholarship on African American life the African diaspora and global Black history. Editorial direction under Woodson emphasized correcting omissions in dominant historical narratives and foregrounding Black agency with content ranging from slavery and Reconstruction to contemporary wartime contributions and cultural production.<br /> <br /> Woodson Carter G. ed. The Negro History Bulletin. Washington D.C.: Association for the Study of Negro Life and History 1941-1949. Seven issues. Quarto. Stapled wrappers.<br /> Archive of seven issues spanning April 1941 through June 1949 each approximately 20-22 pages and measuring 8.5 x 11 inches illustrated with black and white photographs and line drawings. Contents include: 1 April 1941 issue with articles on the Underground Railroad Black communities in Canada and book reviews; 2 May 1944 issue addressing World War II and African American participation across military and civilian life; 3 March 1945 issue featuring Sojourner Truth labor equality free Black populations in antebellum Alabama and racial violence; 4 May 1945 issue examining the Department of Negro Affairs and early American attitudes toward slavery; 5 May 1947 issue including studies of formerly enslaved families such as the Loguens and Tanners suffrage in the South and profiles of Black educators; 6 January 1949 issue with articles on education in Haiti the Negro Little Theatre Movement Negro spirituals and a biography of Frederick Douglass; 7 June 1949 issue addressing intersections of Jewish and Black history modernization in the Virgin Islands regional Black history in Maryland and Virginia and educational policy.<br /> <br /> These issues were produced during a formative period in the expansion of African American historical consciousness when Woodson's efforts challenged the exclusion of Black experiences from mainstream curricula and scholarly discourse. The Negro History Bulletin operated as a bridge between academic research and classroom instruction shaping generations of teachers and students and contributing to the eventual institutionalization of Black Studies programs in the later twentieth century. The publication continues today as the Black History Bulletin recognized as the longest continuously published journal for practitioners in the field. Clean pages with light handling wear; fragile binding to the earliest issue and a punch hole to the upper corner of the June 1949 issue; overall very good condition. The archive provides a concentrated record of early African American historiography and educational practice during a critical period of intellectual and social transformation. unknown
19613987Pittsburgh: Shields Watson & Washington Attorneys at Law 1961. Very good. Together 4 leaves 7 pp. the first two legal-size 14" x 8 1/2" the others slightly shorter; brad bound inside a 14.74 x 9" printed chemise folded to 9" x 3.75". Creases at folds; chemise moderately worn; leaves lightly dust-soiled with one small stain. APPLICATION TO CHARTER AN AFRICAN AMERICAN NON-PROFIT BUSINESS ASSOCIATION. IT WAS CREATED IN RESPONSE TO JIM CROW LAWS THAT REMAINED IN FORCE IN WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA AND ELSEWHERE. THIS SCARCE PRIMARY SOURCE MATERIAL DOCUMENTS THE NEEDS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN BUSINESS OWNERS TO UNITE IN ORDER TO SURVIVE. <br /> <br /> Our charter shows that the "Negro Licensed Beverage Association of Western Pennsylvania" NLBAWP was a group of African American hotel owners restaurant owners and tavern owners. Lingering Jim Crow laws and other societal forces made it exceptionally difficult for such businesses to succeed in the Pittsburgh area and of course elsewhere. The late 1950s and early 1960s saw the development of similar organizations in Philadelphia National Negro Licensed Beverage Association and New Orleans Negro Tavern Owners Association. <br /> <br /> Importantly this document lists the goals of the NLBAWP organization:<br /> <br /> "To foster strengthen and improve business within the Negro community." <br /> "To advance the cause of the Negro tavern and hotel owner as a whole." <br /> "To give service to members to do things for them which they cannot do for themselves or which can be done better or less expensively if done collectively." <br /> "To create and project the proper image of a tavern or hotel owner in the community." <br /> "To sponsor aid and assist any charitable or civic project approved by the members."<br /> <br /> One noteworthy incorporator listed here was Vivian Mason Lane. Lane owned four Pittsburgh taverns in the 1960s and was a community leader through at least the 1980s. She led a neighborhood Chamber of Commerce and ran unsuccessfully for County Commissioner and the State House.<br /> <br /> The 1966-67 Negro Traveler's Green Book "For Vacation Without Aggravation!" lists a grand total of eight suitable motels tourist homes and restaurants in Pittsburgh. In any event we have been unable to determine what -- if anything -- became of the Negro Licensed Beverage Association of Western Pennsylvania. Shields, Watson & Washington, Attorneys at Law unknown
192p. + Plus full page photographs. Small 8vo. Original full cloth binding, with raging lion vignette on front cover. Original dust jacket, torn without loss. Rather scarce. AFRICA/2
196731516Gallimard Couverture rigide toile Paris 1967
196742218Gallimard Jaquette en état satisfaisant Couverture rigide toile Paris 1967
41110Paris, Gallimard (coll. "L'univers des Formes"), 1967. In-4°, 448p. Reliure pleine toile d'éditeur, sous jaquette illustrée.
1970173327Washington DC: Frederick Douglass Institute Museum of African Art 1970. Paperback. VG. Illustrated stapled paper wraps with white lettering. 23 pp. BW illustrations. "This brochure which supplements a permanent exhibition at the Frederick Douglass Institute surveys and highlights the contributions of some fifty selected persons. In such brief form its purpose is merely to suggest the scope and the depth of the Afro-American role. The extent to which its information is new to the reader will make clear for him. we hope how much is yet to be told of the Afro-American story." -Introduction. Includes Ben Shahn drawing of Frederick Douglass. Frederick Douglass Institute, Museum of African Art paperback books
New English Paperback. Pbo. 4to. (30 x 21 cm). In Turkish. 243, [6] p. Agiz tadiyla Kastamonu mutfagi. Recipes and food culture of Kastamonu city.
1936204Chicago & London Ontario: The Journal of Negro History and University of Western Ontario 1936. Vol. XXI No. 3. Stapled Wraps. pp. 9. 8vo. Stapled wraps. Slight age-toning ink name to top corner of the first page contents clean and unmarked; very good. Founded in 1916 by Carter G. Woodson The Journal of Negro History known by this name from 1916 - 2001 is a quarterly publication covering African-American life and history. <br/><br/> The Journal of Negro History and University of Western Ontario paperback
1972140003Vienna: Werner Herzog Filmproduktion 1972. Vintage German A1 poster for the 1972 film. <br/><br/>Herzog's film is notorious for both its style and its eventful production in which Kinski fired a gun accidentally injuring a crew member and Herzog ostensibly stole a group of monkeys due to ship to the US to use in the famous monkey scene. Despite the chaotic and often contentious production period the film immediately achieved cult status upon its release. Visually striking with minimal narrative and dialogue it follows deranged Spanish soldier Lope se Aguirre's search for the legendary gold city El Dorado. <br/><br/>Shot on location in Peru. <br/><br/>23 x 33 inches folded. Small holograph notation to the verso else Near Fine. A vivid bright poster. <br/><br/>Newman Kim Nightmare Movies: Horror On Screen Since the 1960s US. <br/><br/>BFI. Ebert I. Rosenbaum 1000. Werner Herzog Filmproduktion unknown books
New English Paperback. Pbo. Cr. 8vo. (19 x 13 cm). In Turkish. 60 p. Color ills. Ahmed Ziyâüddîn Gümüshânevî (K.S.).
19213085Berlin, Pantheon, 1921. 10 Tafeln, Buchschmuck nach Originalmotiven d. Fangneger. 3 Bl., 207 S., Halblederband mit aufgeklebtem Rückenschild, dreiseitigem Farbschnitt. Zustand 2, Kanten berieben, Rücken leicht fleckig.
1953100149286Editions Albin Michel 1953 in12. 1953. Broché. Le roman raconte l'histoire d'Alain un jeune garçon et de sa relation avec un homme surnommé "le nègre" dans le Montmartre des années 1930. C'est un récit d'apprivoisement et d'apprentissage de la vie dépeignant avec nostalgie un Paris disparu à travers les petites aventures quotidiennes des habitants d'une épicerie-buvette
1956212316Roma: Gherardo Casini Editore 1956. Rilegato tela cloth. Molto buono Very Good. Premessa di Urbano Barberini. Testo di Silvio Negro. 265 fotografie in bianco e nero di C. Meissner D'Alessandri S. Lecchi Tuminello Cuccioni Mariannecci Chauffourier A. Buzzi Altobelli Schemboche Suscipi Moscioni G. Primoli G Lucchetti Sbisà"; Brogi et al. Dettagliato indice delle tavole. 4to cm 355x265. pp. 256. Molto buono Very Good. Copertina leggermente sporca con qualche macchia; leggere fioriture alle prime e alle ultime pagine Lightly soiled cover with some stains;" light yellowing at first and last pages . . Gherardo Casini Editore, hardcover
1956178548Rome: Gherardo Casini 1956. First. hardcover. fine/good. Profusely illustrated with b/w photographs shot between 1845 and 1900 and arranged in chronological order. 253pp with limited text in Italian. Slim folio green cloth edgeworn d.w. board slipcase. Roma: Gherardo Casini 1956. First edition. A fine copy in a good dust wrapper.<br/> <br/> Gherardo Casini unknown
1956178548Rome: Gherardo Casini 1956. First. hardcover. fine/good. Profusely illustrated with b/w photographs shot between 1845 and 1900 and arranged in chronological order. 253pp with limited text in Italian. Slim folio green cloth edgeworn d.w. board slipcase. Roma: Gherardo Casini 1956. First edition. A fine copy in a good dust wrapper.<br/><br/> Gherardo Casini unknown books
093612Modena: 2011. 96pp and with monochrome and colour illustrations. Cloth 31x23.5cms. ISBN: 9788877921222. Text in Italian. Modena: 2011. hardcover
2011093612Negro, Emilio: Alessandro Marchesini (1663-1738). Modena: 2011. 96pp and with monochrome and colour illustrations. Cloth. 31x23.5cms. Text in Italian.
2011093612Negro, Emilio: Alessandro Marchesini (1663-1738). Modena: 2011. 96pp and with monochrome and colour illustrations. Cloth. 31x23.5cms. Text in Italian.
1375961Abidjan: Presses Universitaires de Côte d'ivoire, 1995 in-8, 346 pages, bibliographie. Broché, couv. illustrée, lég. défr., bon état. Biographie de l'intellectuel sénégalais Alioune Diop, fondateur des Editions Présence africaine.