“The concept associated with Black Marxism that I find most productive and most potentially transformative is the concept of racial capitalism…. Global capitalism cannot be adequately comprehended if the racial dimension of capitalism is ignored.”
View MoreTag: Black History
A Museum Goes Beyond Its Walls to Teach Prince George’s County’s Rich History | Washington City Paper
Through its education efforts and programming, the Prince George’s African American Museum and Cultural Center strives to be a pillar in its community.
View MoreThese Were the First Cookbooks Published By Black People in America | Smithsonian Magazine
These cookbooks and domestic guides offer historians a window into the experiences and tastes of black Americans in the 1800s
View MoreToni Morrison’s Radical Vision of Otherness | New Republic
The history of racism and exclusion in the United States is the history of whiteness.
View MoreJussie Smollett Reveals He’ll Be Playing Langston Hughes In Upcoming Biopic | Essence
Smollett recently spoke to the hosts of ESSENCE’s Yes, Girl about his small cameo and revealed there’s more to come from the role.
View MoreMississippi Textbooks Are Keeping Students Ignorant of the Civil Rights Movement | Truthout
Before 2011, Mississippi public school students weren’t required to learn about the Civil Rights Movement at all. The previous social studies standards mentioned the phrase “civil rights” just three times in the 305-page document. It refers to the “Civil Rights Movement” once.
View More“Uncivil”: The Civil War Stories We Didn’t Learn in School | The New Yorker
“Uncivil,” hosted by two journalists, employs riveting storytelling and reporting to highlight the overlooked stories of the American Civil War.
View MoreThe NFL was segregated, until Kenny Washington broke the color barrier in Los Angeles | Timeline
In 1946, before Jackie Robinson, the former UCLA star integrated pro football.
View MoreFannie Lou Hamer at 100: The Speeches That Made Her a Civil-Rights Icon | Time
As many NFL players across the United States make the decision to kneel or face away from the flag as the National Anthem plays before their games, as part of a protest movement that began as a statement about the belief that the U.S. does not live up to its ideals for African-Americans, many have found new meaning in the words of an icon of an earlier wave of protest.
View MoreSmithsonian African American History Museum Gets Own Stamp | The Afro
The United States Postal Service will immortalize the Smithsonian National Museum of African American and Culture on a Forever stamp slated to be issued next week.
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