TEACHING
TEACHING
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BOOK REVIEWS
JEFFREY AARON SNYDER
Making Black History
Description
Reviews
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"Impressive [and] poignant. Highly recommended" (Choice Reviews)
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"lucidly written and passionately argued" (Khalil Gibran Muhammad)
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"brilliantly portrays the courageous men and women who were the scholarly pioneers of the early twentieth-century movement to restore the black experience to its proper and central role in the larger American story" (James D. Anderson)
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"an original, deeply-researched and thoughtful account of Carter G. Woodson and the founding of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History" (Hilary J. Moss)
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"refreshing and compelling" (History of Education Quarterly)
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"promises to provoke more work on a towering figure in U.S. history whose contributions have for too long been underappreciated" (Journal of American History)
In the Jim Crow era, along with Black churches, schools and newspapers, African Americans also had their own history. Making Black History focuses on the engine behind the early Black history movement, Carter G. Woodson and his Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH). Author Jeffrey Aaron Snyder shows how the study and celebration of Black history became an increasingly important part of African American life over the course of the early to mid-twentieth century. It was the glue that held African Americans together as “a people,” a weapon to fight racism and a roadmap to a brighter future.
Making Black History takes an expansive view of the historical enterprise, covering not just the production of black history but also its circulation, reception and performance. Woodson, the only professional historian whose parents had been born into slavery, attracted a strong network of devoted members to the ASNLH, including professional and lay historians, teachers, students, “race” leaders, journalists and artists. They all grappled with a set of interrelated questions: Who and what is “Negro”? What is the relationship of Black history to American history? And what are the purposes of history? Tracking the different answers to these questions, Snyder recovers a rich public discourse about Black history that took shape in journals, monographs and textbooks and sprang to life in the pages of the Black press, the classrooms of Black schools and annual celebrations of Negro History Week.
By lining up the Negro history movement’s trajectory with the wider arc of African American history, Snyder changes our understanding of such signal aspects of twentieth-century Black life as segregated schools, the Harlem Renaissance and the emerging modern civil rights movement.