Record ID | marc_nuls/NULS_PHC_180925.mrc:67717818:5072 |
Source | marc_nuls |
Download Link | /show-records/marc_nuls/NULS_PHC_180925.mrc:67717818:5072?format=raw |
LEADER: 05072cam 2200313 a 4500
001 9920799140001661
005 20150423131745.0
008 000413s2000 nyuabf b 001 0 eng c
020 $a0375406719 :$c$49.95
035 $a(CSdNU)u87854-01national_inst
035 $a(OCoLC)43843074
035 $a(Sirsi) 01-AAK-9504
040 $aBKL$cBKL$dMIA$dUMC$dOrPss
042 $apcc
043 $an-us---
050 4 $aE185$b.F825 2000
100 1 $aFranklin, John Hope,$d1915-2009
245 10 $aFrom slavery to freedom :$ba history of African Americans /$cJohn Hope Franklin, Alfred A. Moss, Jr.
246 30 $aHistory of African Americans
250 $a8th ed.
260 $aNew York :$bA.A Knopf,$c2000.
300 $axxiv, 742 p., [12] p. of plates :$bill. (some col.), maps (some col.) ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 637-685) and index.
505 0 $aLand of Their Ancestors -- Ghana -- Mali -- Songhay -- Other States -- The African Way of Life -- Political Institutions -- Economic Life -- Social Organization -- Religion -- The Arts -- African Culture in the Diaspora -- The Slave Trade and the New World -- European and Asian Interests -- Africans in the New World -- The Big Business of Slave Trading -- One-Way Passage -- Colonial Enterprise in the Caribbean -- The Plantation System -- Slavery in Mainland Latin America -- Colonial Slavery -- Virginia and Maryland -- The Carolinas and Georgia -- The Middle Colonies -- Blacks in Colonial New England -- That All May Be Free -- Slavery and the Revolutionary Philosophy -- Blacks Fighting for American Independence -- The Movement to Manumit Slaves -- The Conservative Reaction -- Blacks in the New Republic -- The Black Population in 1790 -- Slavery and the Industrial Revolution -- Trouble in the Caribbean -- The Closing of the Slave Trade -- The Search for Independence -- Blacks and Manifest Destiny -- Frontier Influences -- Black Pioneers in the Westward March -- The War of 1812 -- Emergence of the Cotton Kingdom -- The Domestic Slave Trade -- Persistence of the African Trade -- That Peculiar Institution -- Scope and Extent -- The Slave Codes -- Plantation Scene -- Nonagricultural Pursuits -- Social Considerations -- The Slave's Reaction to Bondage -- Quasi-Free Blacks -- American Anomaly -- Economic and Social Development -- The Struggle in the North and West -- Colonization -- Slavery and Intersectional Strife -- The North Attacks -- Black Abolitionists -- Runaways--Overland and Underground -- The South Strikes Back -- Stress and Strain in the 1850s -- Civil War -- Uncertain Federal Policy -- Moving toward Freedom -- Confederate Policy -- Blacks Fighting for the Union -- Victory! -- The Effort to Attain Peace -- Reconstruction and the Nation -- Conflicting Policies -- Relief and Rehabilitation -- Economic Adjustment -- Political Currents -- Losing the Peace -- The Struggle for Domination -- The Overthrow of Reconstruction -- The Movement for Disfranchisement -- The Triumph of White Supremacy -- Philanthropy and Self-Help -- Northern Philanthropy and African-American Education -- The Age of Booker T. Washington -- Struggles in the Economic Sphere -- Social and Cultural Growth -- The Color Line -- The New American Imperialism -- America's Empire of People of Color -- Urban Problems -- The Pattern of Violence -- New Solutions for Old Problems -- In Pursuit of Democracy -- World War I -- The Enlistment of African Americans -- Service Overseas -- On the Home Front -- Democracy Escapes -- The Reaction -- The Voice of Protest Rises -- The Harlem Renaissance -- Socioeconomic Problems and African-American Literature -- Harlem, the Seat and Center -- The Circle Widens -- The New Deal -- Depression -- Political Regeneration -- Roosevelt's "Black Cabinet" -- Government Agencies and Relief for Blacks -- Black Labor and the Unions -- The American Dilemma -- Trends in Education -- Opportunities for Self-Expression -- The World of African Americans -- One World or Two? -- Fighting for the Four Freedoms -- Arsenal of Democracy -- Blacks in the Service -- The Home Fires -- The United Nations and Human Welfare -- African Americans in the Cold War Era -- Progress -- Reaction -- Urbanization and Its Consequences -- The Black Revolution -- The Road to Revolution -- The Beginnings -- Marching for Freedom -- The Illusion of Equality -- Revolution at High Tide -- Balance Sheet of the Revolution -- Reaction and Progress -- The Reagan Years -- A New Economic and Political Thrust -- The Bush Quadrennium -- Writers and Artists in Later Years -- Heard and Seen by Millions -- Half Century of Change -- Stirrings -- "On the Pulse of Morning" -- Race-Based Politics -- Enlarging Educational Opportunities -- African Americans and the World.
650 0 $aAfrican Americans$xHistory.
650 0 $aSlavery$zUnited States$xHistory.
700 1 $aMoss, Alfred A.,$d1943-
948 $a11/30/2000$b02/12/2001
999 $aE 185 F825 2000$wLC$c1$i31786101255310$d9/22/2013$e9/22/2013 $f2/23/2004$g1$kCHECKEDOUT$lCIRCSTACKS$mNULS$n17$rM$sY$tBOOK$u11/30/2000