Series Introduction: The Black Letters on the Sign
Introduction
Part One
I. My 15th Trip Abroad
II. Western Europe
III. The Pawned Peoples
IV. The Soviet Union
V. China
Interlude: Communism
Part Two
VI. My Birth and Family
VII. Boyhood in Great Barrington
VIII. I Go South
IX. Harvard in the Last Decades of the 19th Century
X. Europe 1892 to 1894
XI. Wilberforce
XII. University of Pennsylvania
XIII. Atlanta University
XIV. The Niagara Movement
XV. The NAACP
XVI. My Character
XVII. The Depression
XVIII. New Deal for Negroes
XIX. I Return to the NAACP
Part Three
XX. Work for Peace
XXI. An Indicted Criminal
XXII. The Trial
XXIII. My Tenth Decade
Postlude
Index
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois: A Chronology
Selected Bibliography
Henry Louis Gates, Jr., is the Alphonse Fletcher University
Professor and Director of the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for
African and African American Research at Harvard University. He has
edited several major reference works, including Dictionary of
African Biography, African American Lives, Africana, and African
American National Biography. In addition, he is Editor in Chief of
the Oxford African American Studies Center
(www.oxfordaasc.com).
"This set represents an invaluable assembly of the works of the
pioneering African American scholar, activist, and creative
genius....The introductions to the individual volumes are written
by such distinguished scholars as to make those writings
indispensable treasures in their own right. Recommended for all
public libraries and essential for every academic
institution."--Library Journal (starred review)
"This set is a valuable contribution to African-American
scholarship. It has the potential to introduce a new readership to
the scope and breadth of a unique and seminal thinker. The works
included can provide a more comprehensive understanding of the
issues now facing contemporary Americans....[A] breathtaking
collection."--School Library Journal
"The general introduction and the introductions to each of Du
Bois's works form a valuable opus in their own right, as they
convey the author's political and social theories and indicate the
richness and development of his ideas....The realities of slavery,
racism, and segregation in the United States are always at the
forefront, making these works (many of them out-of-print)
continually pertinent and forceful reading....This set will be an
essential addition
to public and college libraries."--Reference and Research Book
News
"This set will be vital to all large university libraries with
collections in African American history and American
literature."--American Reference Books Annual
"Examining Du Bois's oeuvre in its totality reveals an arc to his
career, swinging from the formal scholarly writing of his early
years to a trenchant and trademark blend of history, memoir, and
polemic....Bringing together all of DuBois's work as a whole,
observes [Lawrence D. Bobo of Stanford University's Center for
Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity], 'reveals the enormity
of his intellect, and how it was ignored in his day."--The
Chronicle of
Philanthropy
"W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963) published 22 works during his long
career, all of them contained within this impressive and
painstaking collected set....the general introduction and the
introductions to each of Du Bois's works form a valuable opus in
their own right, as they convey the author's political and social
theories and indicate the richness and development of his ideas. Du
Bois's conception of race and color in America is a central theme
throughout his
oeuvre, beginning with his seminal Souls of Black Folk of 1903. The
realities of slavery, racism, and segregation in the United States
are always at the forefront, making these works (many of them
out-of-print) continually pertinent and forceful reading....This
set will be an essential addition to public and college
libraries."--Reference and Research Book News
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