21 LITERATURE Essays and Addresses |
Adoff, Arnold, comp. Black on black; commentaries by Negro Americans. Foreword by Roger Mae Johnson. New York, Macmillan [1968] 236 p. E185.5.A24 Ahmann, Mathew H., ed. The new Negro. Contributors: Stephen J. Wright [and others]. In the symposium: James Baldwin [and others]. Notre Dame, Ind., Fides Publishers [1961] 145 p. E185.6.A26 Includes papers presented at the 1st convention of the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, held in Detroit in 1961. Baldwin, James. Nobody knows my name; more notes of a native son. New York, Dial Press, 1961. 241 p. E185.61.B197 Bennett, Lerone. The Negro mood, and other essays. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1964. 104 p. E185.61.B43 Bernstein, Barton J., ed. Towards a new past; dissenting essays in American history. New York, Pantheon Books [1968] 364 p. E175.B46 Includes bibliographical references. Brotz, Howard, ed. Negro social and political thought, 1850-1920; representative texts. New York, Basic Books [1966] 593 p. E185.B876 Clark, Kenneth B. Social power and social change in contemporary America; an address [delivered on July 18, 1966, before an audience of summer interns working in the Dept. of State, the Agency for International Development, and the United States Information Agency. Washington, Dept. of State; for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U. S. Govt. Print. Off., 1966] 20 p. ([U.S.] Dept. of State. Publication 8125. Department and Foreign Service series, 134) HN57.C55 "Prepared under the auspices of the U.S. Department of State's Equal Employment Opportunity Program, Office of the Deputy Under Secretary for Administration." Clarke, John H., ed. William Styron's Nat Turner; ten black writers respond. Boston, Beacon Press [1968] 120 p. illus. PS3569.T9C633 Appendix (p. [93]-117): The text of The Confessions of Nat Turner. Crummell, Alexander. Africa and America; addresses and discourses. Springfield, Mass., Willey, 1891. 466 p. port. E185.5.C95 Crummell, Alexander. The relations and duties of free colored men in America to Africa. A letter to Charles B. Dunbar. Hartford, Press of Case, Lockwood, 1861. 54 p. E448.C95 Daedalus. The Negro American. Edited and with introductions by Talcott Parsons and Kenneth B. Clark, and with a foreword by Lyndon B. Johnson. Illustrated with a 32 page portfolio of photographs by Bruce Davidson, selected and introduced by Arthur D. Trottenberg. Boston, Houghton, Mifflin, 1966. xxix, 781 p. illus. (The Daedalus library [v. 7]) E185.6.D24 Most of the essays, some in slightly different form, appeared originally in the fall 1965 and winter 1966 issues of Daedalus. Includes bibliographical references. Daniel, Bradford, ed. Black, white, and gray; twenty-one points of view on the race question. New York, Sheed and Ward [1964] 308 p. E185.61.D26 Douglass, Frederick. Three addresses on the relations subsisting between the white and colored people of the United States. Washington, Gibson Bros., Printers, 1886. 68 p. E185.61.D734 Drimmer, Melvin, comp. Black history; a reappraisal, edited with commentary by Melvin Drimmer. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 1968. xx, 553 p. E185.D7 Essays which present the Negro's role in American history, each prefaced by an analysis of the historical events surrounding the period it covers. Bibliography: p. [531]-538. DuBois, William E. B. Darkwater; voices from within the veil. New York, Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920. 276 p. [E183.5.D8] [TR: E185.61.D83 1920] Reprinted in part from various periodicals. DuBois, William E. B. The souls of black folk; essays and sketches. New York, Blue Heron Press, 1953. 264 p. illus. E185.5.D81 1953 Ebony. White on black; the views of twenty-two white Americans on the Negro. Edited by Era Bell Thompson and Herbert Nipson, editors of Ebony magazine. Chicago, Johnson Pub. Co., 1963. 230 p. E185.6.E26 Franklin, John H. Lincoln and public morality; an address delivered at the Chicago Historical Society on February 12, 1959. [Chicago] Chicago Historical Society, 1959. 24 p. JA79.F66 |
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