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  1. 11 de set. de 2024 · W.E.B. Du Bois (1868–1963), “The Philadelphia Negro: A Social Study.,” Digitus - Online Exhibitions from the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, accessed September 11, 2024, https://fisherdigitus.library.utoronto.ca/document/7944.

  2. Há 4 dias · A Black Philadelphia Reader reveals a great deal about changes to the spatial dimensions of the city’s African American population. In the earliest portion of the book, nearly all the writers– James Forten, Absalom Jones, Robert Purvis, and William Whipper –lived in the neighborhoods we now call Society Hill.

  3. Há 2 dias · As a result of the Great Migration, the first large urban Black communities developed in northern cities beyond New York, Boston, Baltimore, Washington D.C., and Philadelphia, which had Black communities even before the Civil War, and attracted migrants after the war.

  4. 13 de set. de 2024 · On May 13, 1985, after a long standoff, Philadelphia municipal authorities dropped a bomb on a residential row house. The Osage Avenue home was the headquarters of the African-American radical group MOVE, which had confronted police on many occasions since the group's founding in 1972.

    • Teresa Slobuski
    • 2020
  5. 24 de set. de 2024 · In 1899, W. E. B. Du Bois reported that Black American people were much more likely to die of heart disease than their white counterparts in his landmark sociological study The Philadelphia Negro.

  6. Há 3 dias · African American women's literature. African American women's literature is literature created by American women of African descent. African American women like Phillis Wheatley Peters and Lucy Terry in the 18th century are often cited as the founders of the African American literary tradition.

  7. 13 de set. de 2024 · W.E.B. Du Bois is widely known for his civil rights activism, but many sociologists argue that he has yet to receive due recognition as the founding father of American sociology. His groundbreaking study, “The Philadelphia Negro: A Social Study,” …