African American History, Jonathan Scott Holloway
African American History, Jonathan Scott Holloway
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African American History
A Very Short Introduction

Author: Jonathan Scott Holloway

Narrator: Diontae Black

Unabridged: 4 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 02/21/2023


Synopsis

What does it mean to be an American? The story of the African American past demonstrates the difficulty of answering this seemingly simple question. This book illuminates the US's core paradoxes, inviting profound questions about what it means to be an American, a citizen, and a human being.

This book considers how, for centuries, African Americans have fought for what the black feminist intellectual Anna Julia Cooper called "the cause of freedom." It begins in Jamestown in 1619, when the first shipment of enslaved Africans arrived in that settlement. It narrates the creation of a system of racialized chattel slavery, the eventual dismantling of that system in the national bloodletting of the Civil War, and the ways that civil rights disputes have continued to erupt in the more than 150 years since Emancipation. This Very Short Introduction carries forward to the Black Lives Matter movement, a grass-roots activist convulsion that declared that African Americans' present and past have value and meaning. At a moment when political debates grapple with the nation's obligation to acknowledge and perhaps even repair its original sin of racialized slavery, author Jonathan Scott Holloway tells a story about American citizens' capacity and willingness to realize the ideal articulated in America's founding document, namely, that all people were created equal.

About Jonathan Scott Holloway

Jonathan Scott Holloway is president of Rutgers University. He was formerly provost at Northwestern University and Dean of Yale College. He specializes in intellectual and social history, with an emphasis on post-emancipation United States history. His books include Jim Crow Wisdom: Memory and Identity in Black America Since 1940 and Confronting the Veil: Abram Harris Jr, E. Franklin Frazier, and Ralph Bunche, 1919-1941.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Josiah on April 23, 2023

Here's another example of a very short introduction where the title gives the impression of something the pages inside don't deliver. This was a good book as far as it goes (there were some comments made towards the beginning of the book that were quite loaded), but the focus on the history of Afric......more

Goodreads review by Kianna on February 26, 2024

3.75 ⭐️ rounded up. A lot of good baseline information. Would be more useful for people with no knowledge of African American history, but there are a lot of interesting facts I haven’t heard of previously.......more

Goodreads review by Gi on December 15, 2024

Brilliant. Required reading.......more

Goodreads review by Cat on August 18, 2023

This book provides a much-needed augmentation and correction to the exclusionary versions of history that are usually taught or recounted. Thank you, I hope to become better informed by reading this. And it's sure to be interesting as well.......more