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The Baltimore Afro-American, 1892-1950

Part of the Contributions in Afro-American and African studies, series
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Traces the development of the Baltimore Afro-American</i>, one of America's leading black newspapers, from its founding in 1892 to the dawn of the Civil Rights Era in 1950. It focuses on the Afro-American</i>'s coverage of events and issues affecting Baltimore's and the nation's black communities, particularly its crusades for racial reform in the first half of the 20th century. Farrar examines how the Afro-American</i> grew and prospered as a newspaper and as a business. How and why the Afro-American</i> conducted its news and editorial crusades for a powerful local and national black community free of racial disabilities is discussed as well. He also evaluates whether or not the Afro-American</i> succeeded or failed in its racial justice campaigns and to what extent these campaigns made a difference in the local and national black communities' struggle for racial equity. He asserts that the Afro-American</i> was a black middle-class institution that wanted to shape its community according to bourgeois values, but it also broke ground by looking at class issues in the early 20th-century black community.

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£125.10
Product Details
Praeger
0313370567 / 9780313370564
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
071.526
21/05/1998
English
220 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%