A Hubert Harrison ReaderCritical writings by the "father of Harlem radicalism". |
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Contents
Politics | 5 |
78 | 22 |
81 | 23 |
86 | 25 |
95 | 27 |
97 | 28 |
A Product of Black WorkingClass Intellectual Circles in New York | 31 |
5 | 40 |
The Paris Peace Congress | 209 |
Africa at the Peace Table | 210 |
Antiimperialism | 212 |
Britain in India | 213 |
When Might Makes Right | 215 |
The LineUp on the Color Line | 216 |
On Civilizing Africa | 219 |
Imperialist America review of The American Empire by Scott Nearing | 221 |
The Press | 46 |
IThe Negro Problem Stated | 52 |
How to Do It And How | 60 |
Southern Socialists and the Ku Klux Klan | 76 |
The Labor Movement | 78 |
The Negro and the Labor Unions | 79 |
The Negro in Industry review of The Great Steel Strike and Its Lessons by William Z Foster | 81 |
Race Radicalism The Liberty League and The Voice | 85 |
How It Came to | 86 |
Resolutions Passed at the Liberty League Meeting | 88 |
Declaration of Principles of the Liberty League | 89 |
The Liberty Leagues Petition to the House of Representatives of the United States July 4 1917 | 92 |
East St Louis Houston and Armed SelfDefense | 93 |
The East St Louis Horror | 94 |
Houston vs Waco | 95 |
The New Negro 24 As the Currents Flow | 97 |
Our Larger Duty | 99 |
The Need for It and The Nature of | 101 |
Two Negro Radicalisms | 102 |
The Women of Our Race | 105 |
In the Melting Pot re Herodotus | 106 |
The Negro World 30 Race First versus Class First | 107 |
Just Crabs | 109 |
Patronize Your | 111 |
An Open Letter to the Socialist Party of New York City | 113 |
The Boston Chronicle and The Voice of the Negro 34 Race Consciousness | 116 |
Lincoln and Liberty | 129 |
Fact versus Fiction Chapter Two | 130 |
Fact versus Fiction Chapter Three | 133 |
New Negro Politics | 136 |
The Drift in Politics | 137 |
The New Policies for the New Negro | 139 |
The Coming Election | 140 |
Our Professional Friends | 143 |
Politics in the 1920s | 147 |
UNeeda Biscuit | 149 |
The Grand Old Party | 151 |
When the Tail Wags the Dog | 154 |
Our Political Power | 155 |
The Black Tide Turns in Politics | 157 |
Leaders and Leadership On Booker T Washington | 163 |
Insistence upon Its Real Grievances the Only Course for the Race | 164 |
The Liberty Congress and W E B Du Bois | 166 |
The Liberty Congress | 168 |
The Descent of Dr Du Bois | 170 |
When the Blind Lead | 173 |
Problems of Leadership | 175 |
Shillady Resigns | 177 |
A Tender Point | 178 |
Our White Friends | 180 |
Time as Editor of the Negro World and Comments on Marcus Garvey | 182 |
On Garveys Character and Abilities | 188 |
The UNIA Convention | 191 |
Convention Bill of Rights and Elections | 192 |
Marcus Garvey at the Bar of United States Justice | 194 |
The NegroAmerican Speaks | 199 |
Antiimperialism and Internationalism The Great War | 201 |
The White War and the Colored World | 202 |
The White War and the Colored Races | 203 |
WantedA Colored International | 223 |
Disarmament and the Washington Conference | 228 |
The Washington Conference | 229 |
Disarmament and the Darker Races | 231 |
The Caribbean | 234 |
The Cracker in the Caribbean | 236 |
Hands across the Sea | 238 |
The Virgin Islands | 240 |
A Colonial Problem | 241 |
Caribbean Peoples in the United States | 250 |
Hubert Harrison Answers Malliet | 253 |
Meditations 85 Goodwill toward Men | 257 |
Heroes and HeroWorship and the Heroic in Human History | 258 |
A Soul in Search of Itself | 260 |
On Praise | 263 |
Lynching the Klan Race Relations | 265 |
Race Relations | 272 |
Democracy in America | 282 |
Literary Criticism Book Reviews and Book Reviewing | 291 |
Review of Terms of Peace and the Darker Races | 297 |
T Lothrop Stoddard | 305 |
The Brown Man Leads the Way review of The New World | 315 |
W E B Du Bois | 319 |
Africa | 325 |
Octavus Roy Cohen | 336 |
Nigger HeavenA Review of the Reviewers | 344 |
The Harlem Renaissance | 351 |
Harlems Neglected Opportunities | 357 |
Satyricon of Petronius letter to the New York Times | 364 |
Early Theater Reviews | 369 |
Negro Society and the Negro Stage Preamble | 370 |
Negro Society and the Negro Stage Part 2 | 373 |
Reviews from the 1920s | 377 |
The Emperor Jones | 378 |
A Critical Interpretation by a Negro Critic | 383 |
Poets and Poetry 131 The Black Mans Burden A Reply to Rudyard Kipling | 389 |
Another Negro Poet | 391 |
Poetry of Claude McKay | 392 |
Black Bards of Yesterday and Today review of The Book of American Negro Poetry selected and edited by James Weldon Johnson | 394 |
The International Colored Unity League and the Way Forward | 397 |
Program and Principles of the International Colored Unity League | 399 |
The Right Way to Unity | 402 |
The Common People | 404 |
The Roots of Power | 405 |
Biographical Sources on Harrison | 407 |
Notes | 411 |
Education 35 Negro Culture and the Negro College 36 Education and the Race | 426 |
51 | 429 |
71 | 441 |
453 | |
454 | |
457 | |
458 | |
459 | |
460 | |
466 | |
469 | |
470 | |