Encyclopedia of African American Society, Volumen2Gerald David Jaynes Sage Publications, 2005 - 1058 páginas An encyclopedic reference of African American history and culture. |
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Resultados 1-3 de 53
Página 666
... nonviolent demon- strations , boycotts , and other nonviolent actions in India during that country's fight for independence from British colonial rule . Gandhian nonviolent protest was evident in a number of actions in the decades that ...
... nonviolent demon- strations , boycotts , and other nonviolent actions in India during that country's fight for independence from British colonial rule . Gandhian nonviolent protest was evident in a number of actions in the decades that ...
Página 667
... nonviolent resistance advocated by King and other moderate civil rights leaders . Nevertheless , nonviolent protest remains the main- stay of African American political activism in the United States . This is evident , in part , from ...
... nonviolent resistance advocated by King and other moderate civil rights leaders . Nevertheless , nonviolent protest remains the main- stay of African American political activism in the United States . This is evident , in part , from ...
Página 748
... nonviolent tactic . Soon , as word about the Greensboro movement spread across the upper South , black students from other black campuses began their own protests . In places such as Salisbury ( North Carolina ) , San Antonio ( Texas ) ...
... nonviolent tactic . Soon , as word about the Greensboro movement spread across the upper South , black students from other black campuses began their own protests . In places such as Salisbury ( North Carolina ) , San Antonio ( Texas ) ...
Contenido
Editorial Board | 500 |
Readers Guide xiii | 507 |
African Americans in Halls of Fame | 907 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 1 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
activist Advancement of Colored African American women artists athletes Award Baptist baseball became began Black Seminoles black women blues Chicago Church cities civil rights movement College Colored People NAACP Congress culture discrimination early economic Elijah Muhammad federal free blacks freedom Further Reading Harlem Harlem Renaissance History House Jackson jazz Jim Crow Johnson labor leaders League major Malcolm Malcolm X Migration million Muhammad NAACP Nation of Islam National Association Negro nonviolent North number of African number of black Olympics organization percent plantation play policies political popular President programs protest race racial racism radio record riots Robinson SCLC segregation served slave trade slaveowners slavery social society songs soul music South Carolina Southern Supreme Court tion Tuskegee twentieth century U.S. Supreme Court Underground Railroad United urban violence Virginia vote W. E. B. Du Bois Washington William World York