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Link-Up
Digital — February 1, 2003
Black History on the Web by Thomas Pack |
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According
to the African-American History and Heritage Site [http://creativefolk.com/blackhistory.html],
Carter G. Woodson, a scholar, historian, and son of former slaves, started
Black History Week on February 12, 1926. It was chosen for that week because
of the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. In 1976, as
part of the United States’ Bicentennial, the week was expanded to Black
History Month, now celebrated throughout North America.
Woodson also founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, later renamed the Association for the Study of African American Life and History [http://www.asalh.com/], which establishes each yearly national theme for Black History Month. The African-American
History and Heritage Site offers information on the origin of not only
Black History Month but also Kwanzaa, Juneteenth, the NAACP, the National
Urban League, and several other important dates, events, and organizations.
The site includes a toolkit, designed for grades six and up, which provides
links to lesson plans and some of the many other Web sites offering information
on black history.
Over 600 free articles
You can navigate the content through the Eras in Black History section, which covers five distinct periods, from the slave revolts of early America through the Civil Rights Movement. The site’s Timeline of Achievements section traces the contributions of African-Americans to culture, politics, business, religion, the arts, education, and sports. You also can browse the site through an Articles A to Z page, which provides links through two lists: Biographies and Events & Institutions. The site also includes
a Bibliography area and a nice selection of Related Internet Links. The
Study Guide for Students is organized around six classroom activities,
each with teacher recommendations and tips.
Biographies and timelines
Lengthy, illustrated biographies of both contemporary and historical African Americans are available from Biography.com [http://www.biography.com/blackhistory]. Some of the entries include lesson plans and classroom ideas as well as links to Biography Channel videos. Sixty lengthy biographies of important African Americans are available at the Gale Group’s free Black History Month site [http://www.gale.com/free_resources/bhm/index.htm]. Most of the people profiled are from the 20th century, but there is some information on 19th century African Americans, too. Gale’s site also offers a quiz, activities from the Black History Month Resource Book, synopses of African-American literary works, and a timeline of events that helped shape black history. Another timeline is available from PBS [http://www.pbs.org/wnet/aaworld/timeline.html]. These African-American World pages include links to articles, videos, and sound clips from various PBS and NPR programs. You can hear interviews with prominent African Americans such as Quincy Jones and Jesse Jackson. If you want to hear speeches and addresses important to African-American history, visit the History Channel Speeches Archive [http://www.historychannel.com/speeches/index.html]. Here’s a sampling of the people you can find:
African-American literature
Classic African American Literature [http://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/go/multicultural/sites/aframdocs.html] includes links to 50 online works such as The Narrative of Sojourner Truth, Heroes in Black Skins by Booker T. Washington, The Color Line by Frederick Douglas, and The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. DuBois. The Harlem Renaissance site [http://www.nku.edu/~diesmanj/harlem_intro.html] offers the complete text of several poetry and prose works by such writers as Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Nella Larsen, and Zora Neale Hurston. You also can find photos of Harlem Renaissance writers and artists as well as a resource guide to selected women writers of the renaissance. The site called
African American Women Writers of the 19th Century [http://digital.nypl.org/schomburg/writers_aa19/toc.html]
is a digital collection of more than 50 works by 19th century authors.
Part of the Digital Schomburg, the collection offers access to books and
pamphlets published before 1920. The text of the works is searchable.
Library of Congress resources
The Federal Writers'
Project originally did not plan to collect slave interviews. The Southern
Writer’s Project collected them for almost a year before the effort was
transformed into a regional project, coordinated by the national headquarters
of the FWP in Washington, D.C. Now, the Slave Narrative Collection offers
a unique record of people whose voices otherwise might not have been heard
and preserved.
The Library of Congress also offers the African-American Mosaic Web site [http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/african/intro.html]. It’s designed as an introduction to the collections of the Library of Congress that concern African-American history and culture. The site focuses on four areas: colonization, abolition, migration, and the Works Progress Administration. The site presents historical information as well as maps, documents, illustrations, and other images. For example, photographs show the early African-American colonization of Liberia. Maps illustrate black migration to the North. And artwork shows the creativity of African Americans who participated in the Works Progress Administration. American Memory: Historical Collections for the National Digital Library [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/ammemhome.html] includes documents, sound recordings, photographs, and motion pictures. The site covers many topics relevant to black history. Go to the site's Collection Finder page [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/amtitle.html] to access resources such as “African Americans – Sheet Music – 1850-1920,” “African-American Music – Southern U.S. – Recordings – 1938-1943,” and “African-American Odyssey – Exhibit – Multiformat.” The site also includes a Learning Page [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpedu/index.html] with lesson plans and other resources for teachers who want to use primary sources and digitized documents in the classroom. For details on museums with black history information, visit the Web site sponsored by the Association of African American Museums [http://www.blackmuseums.org]. You can search a database of member museums and check events calendars. The site is putting together a Virtual African American Museum Gallery, which will feature high-resolution images, video and audio clips, artifacts, and digitized museum environments. If you’re interested
in museums, you also might want to visit the African American Museums and
Historical Sites [http://www.sil.si.edu/Subject-Guide/afram-museums.html],
a list maintained by Smithsonian Institution Libraries.
Thomas Pack [ThomasPack@aol.com] is a freelance writer who lives near Louisville, Kentucky. |
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