Celebrating Sr. Jeanne Crapo- University Archivist

July 8, 2009 by Ken

srjeanneThe Library recently held a party to honor  Sr. Jeanne Crapo, University Archivist. In the Springer Suite a large crowd of well-wishers enjoyed refreshments and shared stories about Sr. Jeanne’s many contributions to the University. Speeches were given by Bella Gerlich, University Librarian, University President Donna Carroll and former Library Director Inez Ringland. The Library presented Sr. Jeanne with a wall hanging that includes an icon portrait of St. Francis de Sales, patron saint of authors. This gift is especially meaningful as Sr. Jeanne is moving on to a new stage in her professional life – author. Sr. Jeanne is writing a book about the history of Dominican University.

Sr. Jeanne - Thank You! 107At the party Sister Jeanne encouraged the faculty and staff to “Think Archives” and contribute their publications, lectures, institutional records, materials related to student activities and organizations, and any other materials that may be of value to the archives. Lists of many of these materials are now available on the University’s Archives web site.  Click here to see more photos.

We wish Sr. Jeanne well in her new endeavors.

Library closed July 3 & 4

June 29, 2009 by Caroline

Rebecca Crown Library will be closed Friday, July 3 and Saturday, July 4. Have a safe and happy 4th of July.

New Scholarly Communication Guide

June 15, 2009 by Caroline

A new guide to scholarly communication resources is available on the Library web site: http://research.dom.edu/scholarlycommunication.

Use this guide for information on publishing, author rights, open access, digital scholarship, Creative Commons, subject and institutional repositories, and more.

New look for book catalog

June 12, 2009 by Caroline

The DU and I-Share book catalogs are getting new looks.  You’ll see a new interface and some new features.  The upgrade will begin on Sunday, June 14 and will last a few days.  During those few days, nothing new can be added to the catalog.  This means, for example, that if you check out a book, it will not appear on MyAccount until after the upgrade is complete.  And, the status of that book on the catalog record will still say “available” until after the upgrade is complete.

Most importantly, you will be unable to request books through I-Share during the upgrade.  Please use WorldCat for any requests you need during the upgrade.

If you have any questions about how to use the new interface, about using World Cat or about what books you have checked out, or if you can’t find a book on the shelf, please ask us.

New help guides are coming soon.  For now, you can use CARLI’s guides.  Go to http://www.carli.illinois.edu/mem-prod/I-Share/upgrade.html#further and click on Voyager 7.1 Web Voyage User’s Guide.  You may need to log in using your 14-digit student ID #.

Noah Hart Digital Collection

May 20, 2009 by Caroline

Noah Hart Papers

The Noah Hart Papers, Dominican’s first digital collection, is up.

The collection consists mainly of correspondence during the Civil War from Captain Noah Hart (1813-1891) to his wife Emily Julia Peck Hart (1824-1884). Hart enlisted in the 10th Michigan Infantry in 1862 and remained in the service until 1865, moving through Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia.

The letters provide information on the everyday life of the regiment including health and nutrition, supplies, sleeping conditions, weather, pay, and matters back home in Michigan. Of particular note are the letters of July and August 1864 regarding General Sherman’s siege of Atlanta.

The papers also contain Hart’s military records, a portion of his diary, correspondence from Noah and Emily to their son Clarence in the 1880s, a Hart family genealogy beginning in 1605, clippings and publications about Hart family members, and a small selection of photographs.

Annia Hart (maiden name Keating), a 1927 graduate of Rosary College donated the materials in 1967 as the “Stephen Hart Genealogy”. Annia’s husband, Stephen Hart, was Noah Hart’s grandson. Annia’s son, Patrick, later authorized the digitization of the collection.

Please direct questions about this digital collection to digital@dom.edu or 708-524-6884.

Celebrate National Library Week!

April 14, 2009 by Ken

nlw_09

Win Valuable Prizes!

Come help Crown Library Celebrate National Library Week, April 13-17, in the Lewis Link, first floor of the Library.

postermarshallgclassic_readbkgdLibrary staff members will be in Lewis Link to answer all your library-related questions.  We also have a number of activities, such as a Scavenger Hunt and Fun Quotes Quiz where you can WIN VALUABLE PRIZES! We also have FREE STUFF to give out, too!

And, sign up to have your photo taken to get your own READ poster!

For more information on National Library Week, check out Crown Library’s NLW Guide!

See you there!

Happy Birthday Dr. Seuss! March 2nd

March 20, 2009 by coxjenn

Happy Birthday Dr. Seuss!!!!!

Born March 2nd, 1904

“Think left and think right and think low and think
high.  Oh the thinks you can think up if you only try.”

Image from the Almada County Library-Newark Branch

Celebrate with the National Education Association (NEA)

There are some great websites that give fun facts and activities for Dr. Seuss’ Birthday, including the NEA that use Dr. Seuss’ Birthday to promote reading in young children.  In addition to the article below, you can find great tools such as free downloadable versions of 4 different Dr. Seuss books on NEA’s website.

Students at Christopher Columbus Elementary School in Chester, Pa. (l-r) Giayra Franklin, Jose Arroyo, Kayla Grant, Kenny Bess, Tahneeyah Metts, Darnell Jones, Mya Ferguson, Charles King.
CREDIT: © 2009 Photo by Tommy Leonardi/NEA. Courtesy of the National Education Association. All Rights Reserved.

Hit the road with the Cat in the Hat!

More than 45 million readers were in the company of a good book on March 2, NEA’s Read Across America Day.

To rev up readers, the National Education Association launched its Cat-a-Van tours to bring the gift of reading and books to students in need. Through March 7 they’ll be en route all across the country.

Arrow icon Follow along!

About this Program

The National Education Association annually sponsors Read Across America. Now in its twelfth year, it focuses on motivating children to read, in addition to helping them master basic skills.

NEA's Read Across America logoThe reading celebration takes place each year on or near March 2, the birthday of Dr. Seuss. Across the country, thousands of schools, libraries, and community centers participate by bringing together kids and books, and you can too!

On March 2, the National Education Association is calling for every child to be reading in the company of a caring adult. National Education Association Website 2009, Read Across America

Exhibit located on the 1st Floor of Rebecca Crown Library

Since I am primarily a novelist, one might suppose I would choose from the veritable galaxy of star-bright twentieth-century novels to place into the hand of the 2101 child. Truly, there are many of them. But surely our future child will not be reading those novels unless he or she has already become a reader.

Dr. Seuss’s The Cat in the Hat is brilliantly written and drawn, full of enormous energy, funny and silly (not the same), even as it is accessible to a just-starting reader. It is all those things, and, better yet, it is luminously transgressive.

Think of all the rules that we teach and impose upon young people. As a parent I’ve done it myself. Then think of all those things that happen in The Cat in the Hat: the very odd stranger in the house, the being out of control, the breaking of things, the out-and-out naughty behavior, the wildness, the lack of remorse, and oh! above and beyond, the fun of it all!

As we move – or so it would appear – to global standardization, conformity, plus plain old dull sameness, an outrageous role model like the Cat in the Hat is exactly what the future child will require to restore some chaotic balance. That the child will get this from reading a book is an experience that will not only enrich the child but do much for the world of book reading, too. I hope.

By Avi

Horn Book Magazine; Nov/Dec2000, Vol. 76 Issue 6, p647-647, 1p, 1 cartoon

(Call Number: E. SE81CA)

Green Eggs and Ham is about imagination |. The genre of the story is Comedy, the setting is Fantasy.

Sam-I-Am wants a boy to like green eggs and ham, and keeps suggesting different places that the main character might enjoy them. Finally, the boy tries them and discovers that he actually does like green eggs and ham, so he thanks Sam.

Moral reasoning in the story focuses on concern for relationships.

The theme of the story is Don’t make up your mind about something without trying it.

Copyright ©2005 University of Notre Dame – Center for Ethical Education

(Call Number: E. SE81G)

“A lovely bit of tom-foolery which keeps up the suspense and surprise until the last page.”–The New York Times.

(Call Number: E. SE81F1965)

“Rare and wonderful imaginings are told in the author-artist’s inimitable rhyme and are shown in hilariously funny pictures.”–Booklist.

(Call Number: E. Se81m 1974)

dr-suess.jpg

Teaching Physical Science with Children’s Literature: Bartholomew and the Oobleck
Published by Alex on September 10, 2008

Most of us can agree that Dr. Suess is a phenomenal storyteller for kids. His whimsical drawings and poems appeal to all ages. In Bartholomew and the Oobleck, Dr. Suess incorporates elements of scientific theory in a fun story about a King who tries to change the weather. One day the King of Didd decides he is bored with the usual rain, snow, sun and fog that falls from the sky, he desires something more. He orders his magicians to create something else to fall from the sky and they decide to create Oobleck. The magicians announce,

“‘Won’t look like rain. Won’t look like snow.
Won’t look like fog. That’s all we know.
We just can’t tell you anymore.
We’ve never made oobleck before.’”

This little poem by the magicians lays out some the principals of physical science by comparing unknown and known substances and trying to understand what the new form of matter is. More of this demonstration in observation surfaces later in the story when all the oobleck does fall from the sky and sticks to everything, creating a gooey, green mess. The oobleck starts clogging up bird’s nests and instruments, it forces its way indoors through cracks and open windows. The Captain even tries tasting some and finds the oobleck makes him ill. All the while Bartholomew is trying to find the king to fix the problem. In the end, all the king has to do for the oobleck to go away, is publicly apologize. As soon as he says, “I’m sorry” the oobleck disappears, the sun comes out and the whole town is returned to peace.

Curriculum Connections
This book by Dr. Seuss can be used to initiate conversation in scientific theory, observation and the idea of matter. After discussing matter and how to classify it, the class could make oobleck themselves to study and experiment with. It can also be taken a different route and used to talk about the weather, why we have weather, what the seasons are, what normally falls from the sky. Bartholomew and the Oobleck satisfies SOLs in grades K-1 for observation and properties of matter (K.1, K.4, 1.1, 1.3) and grade 2 if you bring in the topic of weather (2.1, 2.6).

(Call Number: E. Se81b 1976)

“Highly recommended.”–(starred) School Library Journal.(Call Number: E. SE81CA)

March is Women’s History Month

March 7, 2009 by willrein

Woman dropping ballot in ballot box, in Parliamentary election, re first time women allowed to vote, in illustration drawn by F. Matania. United Kingdom, Date Taken, December 18, 1918.  Image from Life database.

March is Women’s History Month

“National Womens History Month:  honorary observance of the month of March, as designated in 1987 by the U.S. Congress, in recognition of women’s many accomplishments throughout history. A variety of agencies, schools, and organizations observe the month by focusing on the “consistently overlooked and undervalued” role of American women in history. Libraries and communities promote special events that emphasize the achievements of women.”

“The significance of the month of March dates to the mid-19th century when, on March 8, 1857, a group of female garment workers in New York City staged a protest to demand better working conditions and pay. Police aggressively halted the demonstration, but several years later the determined women formed their own union. In 1911, March 19 was observed as International Women’s Day (IWD) to acknowledge women’s continuing struggle for recognition and rights. The date of IWD was changed to March 8 in 1921. In 1978 the schools of Sonoma county, California, named March Women’s History Month as a means of examining women’s history, issues, and contributions. The idea gained momentum, and in 1981 a congressional resolution proclaimed the week surrounding March 8 National Women’s History Week. In 1986 the National Women’s History Project played a significant role in the expansion of the observance to the entire month of March.”

“Other countries soon adopted similar month-long events. In 1992 Canada began celebrating Women’s History Month. October was selected as the designated month to commemorate the so-called Persons Case, in which the Privy Council of England (then Canada’s highest court of appeal) ruled in October 1929 that females were persons under the law, a decision that contradicted an earlier ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada. In March 2000 Australia began holding its own Women’s History Month.”   “National Women’s History Month.” Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 7 Mar. 2009

Women of Many Nations

Exhibit located on the 1st Floor of Rebecca Crown Library

Rostami-Povey, Elaheh. Afghan Women: Identity and Invasion. London: Zed Books, Limited, Feb. 2008.                                   (Call number, HQ1735.6 .R67 2007)

Review:

Afghan Women arrives at a crucial moment in the history of the global ‘War on Terror’ and provides us with a powerful analysis of the condition of women five years the ‘liberation’ of Afghanistan…After years of neglect, Afghan women were suddenly made visible in familiar roles in the War Story–roles that called for protection and for rescue–used this time (as in many other times) to help legitimize a military intervention. But ‘Is Afghanistan better now?’ (p.74) the author asks.

If politicians and international stakeholders tend to be generally optimistic about the advancements of the reconstruction process, Povey’s analysis provides us with a drastically different understanding of the situation…The first [chapter] describes women’s strategies for survival and struggle during the civil war and the Taliban regime…The second chapter is an account of women’s current situation in the broader context of military occupation and neo-liberal development policies…The last chapter analyses patterns of identity formation and changes in gender relations among Afghans in exile in Iran, Pakistan, the US and the UK.

Through life stories collected among various groups of women, Povey describes their struggle for survival and resistance. In contrast with success stories written by journalists employed by press conglomerates and military strategists, these women’s narratives illustrate the background setting against which Afghan women are fighting for the recognition of their rights.” Billaud, Julie. Rev. of Afghan Women: Identity and Invasionby Elaheh Rostami Povey. Feminist Theory Sep. 2008: 370-72.

African Women South of the Sahara

Stichter, Sharon B., and Jean Hay. African Women South of the Sahara. White Plains: Longman Publishing Group, July 1995. (Call number, HQ1788 .A571984)

Review:

“An interdisciplinary introductory text for undergraduates providing an overview of African women in the economy, in society and culture, and in politics and policy. First edition, 1984. Contains a few b&w photographs. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.” Reference and Research Book News, 19960300

Book Cover

Roy, Manisha. Bengali Women. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, Jan. 1975. (Call number, HQ1744.B4 R68)

Review:

“First published in 1972 and again in 1975, this study of Hindu Bengali women in upper and upper-middle class families in India is cited in BCL3. In a new afterword, Roy discusses changes in Bengali society and culture over the last two decades which have direct bearings on women’s lives: divorce and the breakup of the joint family, education, increasing Westernization, and the erosion of traditional religious practices. Annotation ©2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)” Reference & Research Book News, 01/01/ 1993

Evans, Harriet. The Subject of Gender: Daughters and Mothers in Urban China. Asian Voices Ser. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Incorporated, Dec. 2007. (Call number, HQ1767 .E83 2008)

Review:

“Through analysis of interviews conducted with 31 women spanning several generations, Evans (Chinese cultural studies, Univ. of Westminster) illustrates the impacts of political discourses, popular culture, and economic reforms on women’s female subjectivities and relationships with the most significant women in their lives–their mothers and daughters. This focus on the mother-daughter relationship constitutes a significant shift in China studies away from the family as exclusive patriline toward an inclusive understanding of women’s identities within the context of their female relationships.

Using Foucault’s notion of the discursive subject, Bourdieu’s understanding of embodied patriarchy, and Butler’s theory of gender as performance to analyze her interviewees’ narratives, Evans demonstrates that these women used their language and actions to both respond to and actively shape the gender discourses of their respective eras, simultaneously subscribing to and contesting patriarchy. Evans structures her work around eight recurrent themes in her interviewees’ narratives: separation, communication, reciprocity, private and public worlds, independence and difference, male privilege, filiality, and maternal authority. Her multigenerational approach historicizes motherhood and illustrates shifts in female subjectivity from the 1950s through the present. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers; all levels. N. E. Barnes University of California, Irvine” Choice, 20080901

Within the Plantation Household: Black and White Women of the Old South (Gender and American Culture)

Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. Within the Plantation Household: Black and White Women of the Old South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,  1988. (Call Number, HQ1438.A13 F69 1988)

Review:

“In her rich and rewarding book, Fox-Genovese challenges many of the conventions about women’s history, which has been largely extrapolated from the experiences of northeastern women. Southern women black and white were southerners, bound by a rural world built on human bondage and race and dominated by men. These women were not passive or victims, but resourceful and resistant. Still, Fox-Genovese rejects the now fashionable view that planters’ wives harbored antislavery or feminist sentiments. She places slave women at the center of opposition to slavery. Fox-Genovese has given black and white Southern women voices. Eloquent and powerful; for university and public libraries.Randall M. Miller, St. Joseph’s Univ., Philadelphia” Library Journal, 12/01/1988

Women and the Family in Rural Taiwan

Wolf, Margery. Women and the Family in Rural Taiwan. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, June 1972.          (Call number, HQ1740.5 .W65)

Review:

“…Women and the Family presents a stimulating new perspective on Chinese rural society because it focuses on the largely neglected role of women… The author maintains that this androcentricity has partially distorted our vision of Chinese society, that “really” looks quite different from the woman’s point of view…The author also maintains that the women’s community functions as a conservative force in the village and that the women, especially the older ones, are suspicious of any change that threatens their traditional way of life. If this is true for other parts of China, it might be time to reexamine the role that peasant women played in the Chinese Communist revolution. Were peasant women part of the revolutionary vanguard during the early 1950s, as some Western feminist have argued, or were they reluctant participants in a social movement dominated by men? The problem is not easily resolved, of course, but Wolf’s analysis of the women’s community is a good example of the kind of insight that the fieldworking anthropologist can provide for an understanding of social change in post-revolutionary China… Wolf writes with great clarity and never loses track of her general audience. Women and the Family is highly recommended for specialists as well as non-specialists.” Watson, James L. Rev. of Women and the Family in Rural Taiwan, by Margery Wolf. The Journal of Asian Studies Vol. 34, No. 4 (Aug., 1975): 1039-41.

Lebra, Joyce. Women in Changing Japan. Special Studies on China and East Asia Ser. Boulder: Westview Press, May 1976.                    (Call number, HQ1762 .W65)

Review:

“There has long been a need felt for a good book on the roles of women in modern Japan…The authors of the 13 articles in this book come from a wide range of academic backgrounds, ranging from anthropology to German and political science, although all are American and all are women. Most of the authors reply heavily on interviews of women in specific roles in modern Japanese society and quote extensively from their informants, even including 15 pages of autobiography of one key informant. These first-person data are excellent and often more valuable than the analyses that accompany them… I would recommend that this volume be on the shelf of everyone interested in contemporary social structure in Japan or in comparative women’s roles in society.” Johnson, Thomas W. Rev. of Women in Changing Japan, by Joyce Lebra. American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 80, No. 2  (Jun., 1978): 445.

Websites about Women’s History

American Women’s History: A Research Guide

American Women’s History provides citations to print and Internet reference sources, as well as to selected large primary source collections. The guide also provides information about the tools researchers can use to find additional books, articles, dissertations, and primary sources.” This site was compiled by a librarian at Middle Tennessee State University Library, and specializes in American women’s history.

http://frank.mtsu.edu/~kmiddlet/history/women/wh-intro.html

Library of Congress Celebrates Women’s History Month

“The Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum join in paying tribute to the generations of women whose commitment to nature and the planet have proved invaluable to society.”

http://womenshistorymonth.gov/

National Women’s History Project

“The National Women’s History Project, founded in 1980, is an educational nonprofit organization. Our mission is to recognize and celebrate the diverse and historic accomplishments of women by providing information and educational materials and programs.”

http://www.nwhp.org/

Library/Media Center Spring Break Hours

March 7, 2009 by Ken

weebsie_beach

Photo: Weebsie

No travel plans for Daytona this  Spring Break?  Then come on by the Library.

Library Hours – Spring Break

Mon., 3/9/09 -         Spring Break     CLOSED
Tues., 3/10/09 –      8:00am – 8:00pm
Wed., 3/11/09          8:00am – 8:00pm
Thurs., 3/12/09       8:00am – 8:00pm
Fri., 3/13/09             8:00am – 8:00pm
Sat., 3 /1 4 /09          Resume Regular Hours

Media Center Hours – Spring Break
Mon – 3/9                     CLOSED
Tues – 3/10                 8:00 am to 4:00 pm
Wed – 3/11                  8:00 am to 4:00 pm
Thurs – 3/12               8:00 am to 4:00 pm
Fri – 3/13                     8:00 am to 4:00 pm
Sat – 3/14                    12:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Sunday                        10:00 am  to 2:00 pm
Mon – 3/15                Resume Regular Hours

February is Black History Month

January 29, 2009 by willrein


What is Black History Month

It all began with “Negro History Week (which) was commemorated during the second week of February 1926 to highlight the outstanding accomplishments of African Americans and to call attention to their history. The concept was most vigorously promoted by Carter G. Woodson, the initiator of the observance. This week was selected to coincide with the birthdates of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln. This week-long activity’s primary purpose, according to Woodson, was “to stage dramatizations and other exercises in order to demonstrate the role of the Negro in the past and secure for the race the same considerations in the curriculum that we give others.” During the peak years of the civil rights era and to the mid-1970s, an increasing demand was made by a wide cross-section of the African-American community to extend the celebration period. This led to expanding the observance to all four weeks of February, which then became Black History Month.” quote from Philips, Glenn O. “Negro History Week.” Encyclopedia of African-American Civil Rights . Westport: Greenwood Press, 1992, p.394-395.

The Black History Month exhibit is located on the 1st floor of the library.

Books

Booker T. Washington: the making of a Black leader, 1856-1901

by Louis R. Harlan (call number E185.97 .W4 H37)

“In searching for the dominant ethos of the secretive, sometimes contradictory Alabama educator who became a black power broker for the nation, one discerns pre-eminently a business man– down to the last henhouse joke he told at the fundraising dinner. Good segregated race relations was good business. Civil rights bills were less important than “throw[ing] our force to making a business man of the negro.” While other black leaders have idealistically cried, ” Let My People Go,” “Up Ye Mighty Race,” and “I Have a Dream,” Washington pragmatically counseled, “Cast down your bucket where you are.” Rather than denounce the outrages inflicted on his people, Washington characteristically took the dollars and cents approach. If Negroes were lynched in the winter, he said, people could not expect to have reliable labor in the summer. Washington was nothing if not a realist.” Cheek, William. Review of Booker T. Washington: The Making of a Black Leader, 1865-1901, by Louis R. Harlan. American Historical Review 79 (December 1974): 1634.

First freedom: the responses of Alabama’s Blacks to Emancipation and Reconstruction

by Peter Kolchin (call number E185.93A3 K64)

“This intrusive case study of Alabama blacks during the first half decade following the Civil War centers not on the actions of whites toward the freedmen but on the ways in which the Negroes themselves responded to emancipation. Consisting of a series of chapters on migration, the black family, education, churches, class structure and politics the book presents data demonstrating that the freedmen displayed a vigorous independence and played a vital role in shaping the character of the Reconstruction experience and of the postwar black community. Thus, for example, sharecropping developed largely because the former slaves preferred it to a wage system, and despite the demoralizing effects of slavery black family life assumed a stable patriarchal character…First Freedom is a welcome addition to the growing number of studies approaching Reconstruction in  the South from the perspective of the black experience.” Meier, August. Review of First Freedom: The Responses of Alabama’s Blacks to Emancipation and Reconstruction, by Peter Kolchin. American Historical Review 78 (December 1973): 1535.

Three Negro classics: Up from slavery. The souls of black folk. The autobiography of an ex-colored man.

Introduction by John Hope Franklin (call number E185.97 .W278)

UP FROM SLAVERY

“The autobiography of Booker T Washington is a startling portrait of one of the great Americans of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The illegitimate son of ‘a white man and a Negro slave, Washington, a man who struggled for his education, would go on to struggle for the dignity of all his people in a hostile and alien society.”

THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK

“W.E.B. DuBois’s classic is a major sociological document and one of the momentous books in the mosaic of American literature. No other work has had greater influence on black thinking, and nowhere is the African-American’s unique heritage and his kinship with all men so passionately described.”

THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN EX-COLORED MAN

“Originally published anonymously, James Weldon Johnson’s penetrating work is a remarkable human account of the life of black Americans in the early twentieth century and a profound interpretation of his feelings towards the white man and towards members of his own race. No other book touches with such understanding and objectivity on the phenomenon once called “passing” in a white society.

These three narratives, gathered together in Three Negro Classics chronicle the remarkable evolution of African-American consciousness on both a personal and social level. Profound, intelligent, and insightful, they are as relevant today as they have ever been.The Autobiography of Booker T. Washington is a startling portrait of one of the great Americans of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.The illegitimate son of a white man and a Negro slave, Washington, a man who struggled for his education, would go on to struggle for the dignity of all his people in a hostile and alien society.W.E.B. DuBois’s classic is a major sociological document and one of the momentous books in the mosaic of American literature.No other work has had greater influence on black thinking, and nowhere is the African-American’s unique heritage and his kinship with all men so passionately described.Originally published anonymously, James Weldon Johnson’s penetrating work is a remarkable human account of the life of black Americans in the early twentieth century and a profound interpretation of his feelings towards the white man and towards members of his own race.No other book touches with such understanding and objectivity on the phenomenon once called “passing” in a white society.These three narratives, gathered together in Three Negro Classics, chronicle the remarkable evolution of African-American consciousness on both a personal and social level.Profound, intelligent, and insightful, they are as relevant today as they have ever been.”

Synopsis:

“Up from Slavery by Booker T. Washington, The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. DuBois, and The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man by James Weldon Johnson–these three narratives, gathered together here, chronicle the remarkable evolution of African-American consciousness on both a personal and social level. Profound, intelligent, and insightful, they are as relevant today as they have ever been.”
Synopsis and Reviews found at Powell’s Books website and provided by publisher Avon Books  http://www.powells.com/biblio?show=MASS%20MARKET:USED:9780380015818:3.95#synopses_and_reviews

Read the first page of Chapter 1 at Amazon.com

Parish boundaries: the Catholic encounter with race in the twentieth-century urban North

by John T. McGreevy (call number E185.912 .M38 1996)

“An account of how the Catholic Church in urban areas, with its largely ethnic parishes, responded to American racism and the ferment of the civil rights movement. Throughout most of this century, McGreevy (History/Harvard) asserts, Catholic parishes, with their distinctive emphasis on geographical boundaries, constituted a unique combination of educational, religious, and social communities, representing a specifically Catholic style of merging neighborhood and region.” Catholics arriving in America gravitated to areas in which there were Catholic churches, and the neighborhoods developed a clear, intense ethnic identity that did not easily admit outsiders. McGreevy concentrates on the period between WW I, when the Catholic system of parishes and schools aggressively expanded into every section of the cities, and the early 1970s, when the system began to show signs of strain. He is especially interested in exploring how Catholics and African-Americans interacted with one another. There was, early on, clear Vatican impatience with the existence of separate Catholic institutions for blacks. A number of individuals in the Church were uneasy with the unintended results of the parish system: Jesuit John LaFarge worked for greater integration, as did the Federation of Coloured Catholics. Public figures like Bishop Sheen and Cardinal Spellman presented a vision of Catholicism as transcending national and racial boundaries. Many Catholics endorsed integration in principle but fiercely opposed upsetting the ethnic homeostasis of their own parishes. In the 1960s Catholics’ social consciousness was raised by the Second Vatican Council and the civil rights movement. But as the model of integration came to be questioned in the name of respect for diversity, liberal Catholics who had fought against the parish system were, paradoxically, faced with a crisis. For many, their religious affiliation seemed an obstacle that protected a discredited status quo. A thorough, sensitive, and balanced contribution. (photos, not seen)” (Review found in Books in Print database) Kirkus Reviews 19960301

Up from slavery

by Booker T. Washington (call number E185.97 .W4 A3 1995)

“Washington was an educator, founder of the renowned Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. He advocated blacks advancing by mastery of vocational skills rather than by seeking civil rights and social equality–cooperation between the races playing an important part in his thinking. His autobiography traces his upward path from slavery.” (Review found in Books in Print database) Booklist 19900115

All-night party: the women of bohemian Greenwich Village and Harlem, 1913-1930

by Andrea Barnet (call number F128.5 .B26513 2004)

“Scholars of history and literature wrestle with questions of how to define modernity or modernism. These issues become even more complex when applied to US women and African Americans. Barnet’s brilliant study illuminates the lives of unconventional women such as Mina Loy, Margaret Anderson, Jane Heap, Djuna Barnes, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Emma Goldman, Mabel Dodge, Marianne Moore, and Margaret Sanger in the focal period 1913-1930. However, Barnet does not limit her inquiry to the lives of white women only. She also examines African American women such as A’Lelia Walker, Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Ethel Waters, suggesting that what these women, black and white, shared in common was their dissatisfaction with the limits of Victorian womanhood. As cultural pioneers, they chafed against a single definition of femininity and ultimately rebelled against tradition. Their choices began in negation, but place them closer to contemporary women than to their Victorian-era mothers, thus linking them to a modernist sensibility that treats art as an expression of the inner self and not merely the outer world. Richly illustrated with black and white photographs, this is an important contribution. ^B Summing Up: Highly recommended. All public and academic levels and libraries. W. Glasker Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Camden” (Review found in Books in Print database) Choice 20041201

Websites

BlackPlanet.com

http://www.blackplanet.com/

Social networking site for African, African-Americans, and those of African descent.

NAACP

http://www.naacp.org/

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People goal is “to ensure the political, educational, social, and economic equality of rights of all persons and to eliminate racial hatred and racial discrimination.”

Southern Christian Leadership Council

http://www.sclcnational.org/net/content/page.aspx?s=25461.0.12.2607

This organization was founded by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rev. Joseph E. Lowery, and other important black figures of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960’s

The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database

http://www.slavevoyages.org/tast/index.faces

This database has information on almost 35,000 slave voyages that occurred between the 16th and 19th centuries.  There a Voyages Database where you can search maps, charts, and other types of data. Search estimates of how many slaves were transported. Also, included is an African names database, that identifies over 67,000 Africans aboard slave ships, using name, age, gender, origin, and place of embarkation.

“For anyone interested in learning more about the transatlantic slave trade, this database is essential. It contains materials on ships, crews, slaves, and places of embarkation and landing. The database lists the names of ships, captains, number of crew and slaves, place where slaves were taken and landed, where they were sold, and if anything unusual happened during the voyage. It can be searched by just about any variable imaginable, including the number of crew deaths and the outcome of the voyage. It is hard to imagine a more comprehensive database on the subject. Originally distributed on CD-ROM, the database is now readily accessible online. It loads very quickly and is easy to understand. The authors and contributors are recognized authorities, including David Eltis and Herbert Klein (who began to collect the material in the 1960s); therefore, the information can be assumed to be reliable. The site provides links to other relevant sites and lesson plans for secondary school teachers on the slave trade. This is a unique site for its comprehensiveness and search features. Anyone studying slavery, from sixth grade through university instructors, will quickly find this site to be a necessity in their classroom. Undergraduate students will be using this database for a very long time. Summing Up: Essential. All audiences and libraries. – K. L. Gorman, Minnesota State University-Mankato” (Editors’ Picks February 2009. Choice, v.46, no. 06, February 2009.)


Black and white images of black historical figures at the top of this page are from http://www.isoe-online.com/News_110108c.html and http://www.larklane.com/D3webwork2007/MohammedAbuHassan/index.htm