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HIST 166: African-American History: Modern Freedom Struggle

HIST 166: African-American History: Modern Freedom Struggle (Fall 2007, Stanford Univ.). Instructor: Professor Clayborne Carson, a professor in the History Department at Stanford University. This course introduces the viewer to African-American history, with particular emphasis on the political thought and protest movements of the period after 1930, focusing on selected individuals who have shaped and been shaped by modern African-American struggles for freedom and justice.

Introduction


Lecture 01 - Introduction and W.E.B. Du Bois
Lecture 02 - W.E.B. Du Bois and the Great Depression
Lecture 03 - Shirley Graham: Transformation of an Artist/Intellectual
Lecture 04 - Paul Robeson: Star to Outcast
Lecture 05 - Bayard Rustin: Radical Outsider
Lecture 06 - Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Social Gospel
Lecture 07 - Awele Makeba on "The Women Who Made the Montgomery Movement"
Lecture 08 - Ella Baker Inspires the Student Movement
Lecture 09 - Bob Moses: Mississippi Organizer
Lecture 10 - Guest Lecture by Vincent Harding on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Lecture 11 - Guest Lecture by Clarence Jones on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Lecture 12 - Malcolm X and his Ambiguous Legacy
Lecture 13 - Stokely Carmichael Defines Black Power
Lecture 14 - Guest Lecture by Elaine Brown on the Black Panther Party
Lecture 15 - Outlaw Feminist Angela Davis
Lecture 16 - Guest Lecture by Erica Huggins
Lecture 17
Lecture 18 - Tupac Shakur's "Thug Life"
Lecture 19 - Barack Obama's American Dream