Sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois was the psychologist we have never acknowledged. He warned us about double consciousness—psychiatry just called it psychosis.
Dikembe Mutombo's basketball legacy, Building confidence and determination, Blending life with basketball wisdom. McDonald's Salutes Faces of Black History 2025 ...
In 2013, the widely acclaimed artist Carrie Mae Weems — a charismatic artist, activist and educator, known for installations, ...
In celebration of Black History Month, Calvert Library and Maryland Libraries Together have collaborated to present a special ...
Civil rights champions have diverse college journeys. Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. may be the most recognized civil rights leader in U.S. history, but across many decades, numerous Black activists ...
In “The World After Gaza,” Pankaj Mishra looks for moral clarity in the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.
Twenty students from Spokane-area schools will be showcasing their art in the annual Black Voices Symposium event on Monday, ...
In marking 90 years since the publication of Du Bois’s groundbreaking work "Black Reconstruction," this year’s festival will ...
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If this love affair didn’t happen, the Harlem Renaissance may not have ever occurred“It’s not only that she discovered these people, but she helped them mature into the [writers and young adults] they became ... of just how human they really were. “Jesse and W.E.B. Du Bois were ...
Born in Crescent City on April 15, 1889, then raised and educated in Jacksonville, Florida Mr. Asa Philip Randolph was the son of an AME Minister and tailor father, and seamstress mother.
“It’s not only that she discovered these people, but she helped them mature into the [writers and young adults] they ... “Jesse and W.E.B. Du Bois were extraordinary people,” she said.
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