|
Resources in Black Studies
The African Diaspora - People of African Descent
in the United States; Africa;
the Caribbean & Latin America;
Europe & Australasia
Organizations, Programs, Centers & Archives
Historical Texts & Documents
Politics & Government
Web Links to the African Diaspora
Discussion Forums
News Media
Radio, TV & Film
Literature
Religion
Arts & Images
Music
Online Magazines & Journals
Slavery and the Slavetrade
Slavery Scholars & Researchers
- Africa Policy Information Center (APIC)
- The Africa Policy Information Center (APIC) aims to widen the policy debate in the United States around African issues and the U.S. role in Africa by providing accessible policy-relevant information and analysis. The website includes documents and links to APIC, U.N., U.S. and other organizational policy publications. Information on APIC listserves and links to African book publishers is also on the website.
-
African-American Studies Programs in the U.S.
-
African Studies (Central Connecticut State University)
- The African
Studies Center Online (University of Pennsylvania)
-
African Studies Library Collections, Indiana University
-
Africana Studies (formerly Black Studies), University of Pittsburgh
-
Archives of the African American Music Center, Indiana University
-
Black Film Center/Archive, Indiana University Bloomington
-
African Studies Center (University of Pennsylvania)
-
Black Studies at Wooster
- James S. Coleman
African Studies Center
- The Department of Afro-American Studies, Indiana University
-
Department of Black Studies, University of California
at Santa Barbara
-
Center for Black Studies, University of California
at Santa Barbara
-
H-Net
- H-Net, Humanities & Social Sciences On-Line,
encourages scholarly discussion, aids in the
development of public humanities projects, and in general
is involved in the development of the educational
potential of the Internet. Online resources
include research and teaching aids, calls for papers,
conference announcements, bibliographies, exhibition
announcements, resources, syllabi and dissertations,
archive and manuscript collections, academic programs
and internet links. H-Net electronic
discussion groups
include H-Africa (African History); H-AfrLitCine
(Teaching and Study of African Literature and Cinema);
H-Afro-Am (African-American Studies);
H-AfrTeach (Teaching African History & Studies).
-
John Hope Franklin Research Center
- The center "collects, preserves, and promotes the use of
library materials bearing on the history of Africa and people
of African descent" through activities including grant support to
scholars and researchers; public programming; and work with local teachers
and students to promote the use of primary documents.
- UCLA International Studies
and Overseas Programs
- Joint Center for
Political and Economic Studies
- Founded in 1970,
the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies is a
national nonprofit institution that conducts
independent research on public policy issus of special concern to black Americans.
- MOLIS,
Minority On-Line Information Center
- MOLIS
provides current information about Historically Black
Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and Hispanic-Serving
Institutions (HSIs), job and scholarship information,
campus news from HBCUs and HSIs.
-
The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New
York Public Library
-
School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa
- UCLA Summer
Institute for Educators
-
TransAfrica Forum
- TransAfrica Forum, an African-American foreign policy institution, was founded in 1981 to provide a forum for the collection, analysis and dissemination of information about Africa and the Caribbean and about the United States' policies affecting these regions.
- UCLA Library Collections and
Internet Resources in: African Studies
- UCLA Library Collections and
Internet Resources in: African-American Studies
- University of the
Witwatersrand, South Africa
-
Washington Office on Africa (WOA)
- The Washington Office on Africa (WOA) is a not-for-profit church, trade union and civil rights groups supported organization that works with Congress on Africa-related legislation. Documents and information from WOA are included on the APIC website.
- W.E.B.
Du Bois Institute
- Founded in 1975, the W.E.B.
Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research is dedicated to the study of the history, culture, and social institutions of African Americans.
- William Monroe
Trotter Institute
- William Monroe Trotter
Institute of the University of Massachusetts Boston
was founded in 1984 to address the needs and concerns
of the local and nation Black community through research, technical assistance, and public service.
[ Top of Page ]
- African-American Women
On-line Archival Collections (Duke University)
- African American Resources for the
University of Virginia
- Letters, broadsides,
pamphlets, slave bills, antislavery circulars and texts
from free Blacks, dating from 1795-1864. These documents are from the UV Library Special Collections.
-
The African-American Mosaic: Selections from a Library
of Congress Exhibit
- These selections include text and photos from rare and significant Library of Congress holdings on Colonization, Abolition, Migrations, and the WPA.
-
African Indigenous Knowledge Systems
-
American Slave Narratives: An Online Anthology
- This web site provides an opportunity to read a
sample of the 2300 plus slave narratives, collected by
the Works Progress Administration (WPA) from 1936-1938. Included are selected photographs, audio bits from the original interviews, an annotated index, related readings and internet sites.
-
American Memory: Historical Collections from the Library
of Congress
- Primary source and archival materials relating to
American culture and history, including:
"AFRICAN-AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES"
(351 rare pamphlets on African-Americans between
Reconstruction and the First World War);
"LIFE HISTORIES: Manuscripts from the Federal Writers'
Project,1936-1940"; "PORTRAITS BY CARL VAN VECHTEN,
1932-1964", and other collections pertinent to Black
Studies.
N.B.: Files can be viewed as plain text.
Or, for enhanced visual and text, use an SGML viewer.
-
Christine's Genealogy Website
- Early obituaries, census records, ships lists of emigration
to Liberia in the 1800s, early newspaper accounts,
essays, and links to other African-American and related
genealogical resources.
- Documenting the African American
Experience
- Sample African American texts published by Readex
including writers such as Benjamin Banneker, Jupiter
Hammon, and Phillis Wheatley.
-
Documenting the American South
- Several full text narratives, including book
covers and title pages, are included here.
N.B.: To view each narrative without special software,
click on "HTML" listed with each narrative.
-
Historical Museum of Southern Florida
- Exploring culture, folklife & history of the
in Greater Miami, South Florida and the Caribbean
-
The Marcus Garvey and UNIA Papers Project, UCLA
-
National Park Service: Culture Groups: African-Americans
- Information on national parks and issues around the
exploration of African-American history.
-
Profiles in Connecticut Black History (Hartford Courant)
-
Race and Ethnicity Collection
- Reference material, essays,
and other works addressing issues of race and ethnicity.
Available from the English Server, English Department,
Carnegie Mellon University.
- William
Grant Still Collection (Duke University)
-
The Survey Graphic Harlem Number
- Third
Person, First Person: Slave Voices (Duke University)
- Valley of the Shadow Archives: Slavery & Free Blacks Records, Virginia
- This page of public records contains links to: 1860 Augusta County Population Census; 1860 Franklin County Population Census; 1860 Augusta County Agricultural Census; 1860 Franklin County Agricultural Census;
Virginia Slaveowner Census; Staunton City
Tax Digests (1857 or 1860);Chambersburg City Tax Digests (1860 only); Register of Free Blacks, Augusta County, 1803-1865.
[ Top of Page ]
- African National Congress
- The ANC is the majority party in South Africa's Government of National Unity. It came to power after the first democratic elections in April 1994.
-
Colorlines: A Series on Race (Hartford Courant)
- Congressional Black Caucus Foundation
- Links to various sources of information on the CBC.
- Empowerment Zones and Enterprise Communities (EZ/EC)
- The Empowerment Zones and Enterprise Communities (EZ/EC) is a U.S. Presidential initiative designed to create self-sustaining, long-term economic development in
areas of pervasive poverty & unemployment, through alliances among private, public, and nonprofit entities.
-
INCORE Guide to Internet Sources on Conflict and Ethnicity in Sudan
- INCORE, the Initiative on Conflict Resolution and Ethnicity, is a joint
initiative of the University of Ulster and the United Nations University.
This INCORE guide contains a very useful list of content rich internet
resources--news sources, email lists, online essays, megasites, etc.,
relating to conflict and ethnicity in Sudan.
-
South African Government Information
- South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report
[ Top of Page ]
-
Black Information Link (BLINK)
- Black Power Points
- U.S. and Africa related texts and internet resources
- BBC Education
-
The Electronic African Bookworm
-
INCORE Guide to Internet Sources on Conflict and Ethnicity in Sudan
- INCORE, the Initiative on Conflict Resolution and Ethnicity, is a joint
initiative of the University of Ulster and the United Nations University.
This INCORE guide contains a very useful list of content rich internet
resources--news sources, email lists, online essays, megasites, etc.,
relating to conflict and ethnicity in Sudan.
-
SunSITE Southern Africa
- The Universal Black
Pages
- Yahoo! - Africa
- Yahoo! - Caribbean
[ Top of Page ]
-
H-Net's e-mail Discussion Lists
- Academic
exchange of ideas and materials on research, teaching,
and scholarship, by subject area.
- Black Talk
[ Top of Page ]
-
Addis Tribune Home Page
-
Africa2000
-
AllAfrica.com
- Country-by-country coverage reports incorporating
Africa News Online
- Africa Online (Africa)
- AFRO America
- The Website of the AFRO American Company of Baltimore, publishers of the Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Richmond, VA editions of the AFRO newspaper.
- Afronet.com
- Arabic News
- English language news on the Middle East and North Africa
-
BBC World Service
-
Black Camera, Newsletter of the BFC/A
- Table of Contents of the Newsletter of the Black Film Center/Archive, University of Indiana Bloomington
-
The Black World Today (U.S. and the Diaspora)
-
Daily Mail & Guardian (eM&G) (South Africa)
-
Ethiopian News Headlines
-
Impact International
- News and reports on Africa, Asia, Europe and the Islamic world.
- Independent Online
(South Africa)
-
The Post (Zambia)
[ Top of Page ]
- Black Americans and Silent Film
- Electronic
Urban Report
-
Fespaco 2001
- The Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou
-
Lee Bailey's RadioScope
- Entertainment and personalities
magazine
-
Joy Online (Ghana/Independent)
- South African
Independent Film Site
[ Top of Page ]
-
The Coretta Scott King Award
- This award
honors African American authors and illustrators for outstanding
contributions to children's and young adult literature that
promotes understanding and appreciation of culture and
contribution of all people to the realization of the American
Dream. The award is administered by the American Library
Association's Social Responsibility Round Table.
- Documenting the African American
Experience
- Sample African American texts published by Readex
including writers such as Benjamin Banneker, Jupiter
Hammon, and Phillis Wheatley.
-
Rita Dove
- This site contains the poem "LADY FREEDOM AMONG US" (text & audio) by
Rita Dove, published as the University of Virginia Libraries
four-millionth volume, a bibliography of Ms. Dove's works and
biographical information.
-
African-American Literature: A Reference
Guide
- Guide to resources in the UCSB Davidson Library
[ Top of Page ]
-
African American Religions
- This page provides
links to Yoruba, voodoo, Islam, Santeria, Baptist and
other pages.
-
African Indigenous Knowledge Systems
[ Top of Page ]
-
Anacostia Museum and Center for
African American History and Culture
- The Baobab Project
- Founded in
1994, the Baobab Project was established to make African
visual culture available to a broader audience, as well
as to create a research tool which can be used by scholars
and students alike.
-
John H. White: Portrait of Black Chicago
- Illustrations from Documentary Sources,
North Carolina
- Early American (1800s-1940s) images
of African Americans and manuscripts, held at the Wilson
Library, University of North Carolina. Please note:
These images may be protected by copyright.
- Illustrations from Documentary Sources,
University of Virginia
- Images and manuscripts,
largely from the 1800s, held at the University of Virginia.
-
Without Sanctuary : Lynching Photography in America, James Allen
(Editor)
[ Top of Page ]
-
Duke Ellington's Washington
-
Electric Guitar
-
The Louis Armstrong Centennial Radio Project (NPR, National Public Radio)
-
The Red Hot Jazz Archive
-
Stanford Jazz Workshop
[ Top of Page ]
-
Africa Update
- Archives of Africa Update, the quarterly newsletter
of the Central Connecticut State University African Studies Program.
-
Australian Humanities Review (AHR)
- AHR is a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary electronic
journal published quarterly with regular updates every
two weeks.
- Essence
-
Essence, a magazine for contemporary African-American women.
-
Fespaco Newsletter
- The newsletter of the Panafrican Film and Television
Festival of Ouagadougou
-
Jouvert: A Journal of Postcolonial Studies
- Jouvert is a refereed, multi-disciplinary
journal published biannually concerning the interrogation
of textual, cultural and political postcolonialisms.
[ Top of Page ]
-
Exploring Amistad at Mystic Seaport
-
Amistad (motion picture): A Selective Bibliography of Materials in the UC
Berkeley Library
-
The Slave Revolt On Board The American Brig Creole
- From the Creole Research Center
-
African Slave Trade Patrol 1820-1861 (Department Of The Navy -- Naval Historical
Center)
-
A Slave Ship Speaks: The Wreck of the Henrietta Marie
- From the Historical Museum of Southern Florida
-
Henrietta Marie (Mel Fisher Maritime Museum)
- A description of the English merchant-slaver's
shipwreck in 1700 and its excavation in 1972,
thirty-five miles west of Key West, Florida,
accompanied by text, illustrations and photographs.
Click on "Wrecks and Excavations".
-
New York's African Burial Ground
-
On-Line Data Archive: "Slave Movement During the Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Centuries"
- Records, data & other documentation of slave ships and the
slave trade, including the Virginia, Cuba, Brazil, France, &
England. Available from the Data and Program Library Service,
University of Wisconsin-Madison.
-
"The African Diaspora"
- An essay by Paul E. Lovejoy, "The African Diaspora": Revisionist Interpretations of Ethnicity,
Culture and Religion under Slavery.
-
Middle Passage Voyage
- Classes are invited to participate in a number of educational activities
as they follow the journey of Captain Bill Pickney and his crew sail the
Middle Passage from West Africa to the Americas.
-
Excerpts from Slave Narratives, edited by Steven Mintz
(University of Houston)
-
Third Person, First Person: Slave Voices From the Broadside
Collection, Special Collections, Duke University
- Through letters, broadsides, receipts, bills of sale, &
other documents (in part or in whole or with a
citation only), this exhibits gives glimples of "life experiences
of American slaves from the late eighteenth century through the
nineteenth century". Several items include images.
-
Remembering Slavery: Those Who Survived Tell Their Stories
- This radio project is based upon text and audio files from the Works
Project Administration, and the Archive of Folk Song (Library of Congress).
Included are interviews and songs from former slaves and narrated
slave narrative transcripts performed by Debbie Allen, Melba
Moore, Louis Gossett Jr., Esther Rolle, James Earl Jones, Clifton Davis,
and others.
-
U.S. Constitution: Thirteenth Amendment:Annotations (FindLaw)
-
An Exhibit: The Emancipation Proclamation
- Audio of Charlie Smith, a former slave, speaking about his life
during slavery; an essay on the proclamation by historian John Hope Franklin;
text and digital images of the original document. From the
National Archives and Records Administration's Online Exhibit Hall.
-
The American Anti-Slavery Group, Inc.
- Dedicated to abolishing existing slavery worldwide, AASG monitors, documents,
and publicizes slavery around the world, with particular focus on black
chattel slavery in North Africa and involuntary servitude in the United
States.
[ Top of Page ]
-
Joseph E. Inikori
-
Stanley Engerman
-
John Hope Franklin
-
Winthrop D. Jordan
-
Leon F. Litwack
- see also
History 7B: American Society, 1865-1999
-
Orlando Patterson
-
Robert Watson - West African Slavery
[ Top of Page ]
Author: Sylvia Curtis
|