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Celebrating Black History Month - JSTOR Daily

By: The Editors 7-9 minutes 1/31/2022

February marks Black History Month, a month-long observance in the United States and Canada that recognizes the significant contributions of African-Americans to American history, as well as the historical legacies of the African diaspora. We hope you’ll find the stories below, and the scholarship they include in full, a valuable resource for classroom or leisure reading.

Radical Black Voices

Carter G. Woodson, The Father of Black History Month

February 12, 2015

The origins of Black History Month date back to 1926, when a historian named Carter G. Woodson spearheaded “Negro History Week.”

Cedric Robinson

Cedric Robinson and the Black Radical Tradition

November 11, 2021

Cedric Robinson proposed that the Black radical tradition was necessitated into existence by “racial capitalism.”

Alice Childress, Paul Robeson and Lorraine Hansberry

In the McCarthy Era, to Be Black Was to Be Red

November 13, 2019

The Marxist sympathies of Black radical leaders like Paul Robeson, Alice Childress, and Lorraine Hansberry made them targets for the FBI.

Stokely Carmichael, 1973

Stokely Carmichael, Radical Teacher

June 21, 2021

The civil rights leader who changed his name to Kwame Ture encouraged students in the Mississippi Freedom Schools to think critically.

Tuskegee University’s Hidden Audio Collections

February 21, 2020

The archives of the historically black Tuskegee University recently released recordings from 1957 to 1971, with a number by powerful civil rights leaders.

Building Black Community Spaces

David Ruggles

The First Black-Owned Bookstore and the Fight for Freedom

July 10, 2020

Black abolitionist David Ruggles opened the first Black-owned bookstore in 1834, pointing the way to freedom—in more ways than one.

Freedom House library, September 1964

Freedom Libraries and the Fight for Library Equity

January 10, 2022

Freedom libraries in the south provided Black residents with access to spaces and books, whether in church basements or private homes.

Teaching Black Women’s Self-Care during Jim Crow

October 6, 2021

Maryrose Reeves Allen founded a wellness program at Howard University in 1925 that emphasized the physical, mental, and spiritual health of Black women.

A postcard advertising Rev. Dr. Bow Weevil, a Rooster Channel Jumper

How Black CB Radio Users Created an Audible Community

November 18, 2021

CB radio was portrayed as a mostly white enthusiasm in its heyday, but Black CB users were active as early as 1959.

Combating Segregation

Berea College sends its extension workers into remote communities

How a Southern College Tried to Resist Segregation

August 20, 2021

The founder of Kentucky's Berea College was an abolitionist. While he was alive, the school offered a free education for both Black and white students.

The first black marines decorated by the famed 2nd Marine Dvision somewhere in the Pacific. (Left to right) Staff Sgt Timerlate Kirven and Cpl. Samuel J. Love, Sr., received Purple Hearts for wounds received in the Battle of Saipan.

Who Were the Montford Point Marines?

June 26, 2019

The first African-American recruits in the Marine Corps trained at Montford Point, eventually ending the military’s longstanding policy of racial segregation.

Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All-Star_Bowling_Alley_(Orangeburg_SC)_sign_from_SW_1.JPG

Desegregating Bowling Alleys

December 14, 2021

The bowling desegregation movement began during World War II, but wouldn’t end there.

Pee Dee Rosenwald School, Marion County, South Carolina, c. 1935.

How Black Communities Built Their Own Schools

August 4, 2020

Rosenwald schools, named for a philanthropist, were funded mostly by Black people of the segregated South.

New Orleans, 1939

How St. Louis Domestic Workers Fought Exploitation

January 26, 2021

Without many legal protections under the New Deal, Black women organized through the local Urban League.

Highlighting Overlooked Black History

A cowgirl participates in the barrel race competition at the Bill Pickett Invitational Rodeo on April 1, 2017 in Memphis, Tennessee.

Black Cowboys and the History of the Rodeo

February 11, 2021

Long overlooked in histories of the West, African-American rodeo stars also faced discrimination and erasure in that sport, too.

Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Two_African_American_women,_three-quarter_length_portrait,_seated,_facing_each_other_LCCN99472087.tif

Searching for Black Queer History in Sensational Newspapers

March 14, 2019

Sometimes finding the stories of marginalized populations demands reading between the lines.

The cover of the February 1949 issue of Ebony Magazine

Black Images and the Politics of Beauty

March 1, 2021

How Black-owned charm schools and modeling agencies challenged stereotypes of African American women after World War II.

Black History in Literature, Science, & the Arts

African Phantasy : Awakening by Winold Reiss

The New Negro and the Dawn of the Harlem Renaissance

January 25, 2021

In 1925, an anthology of Black creative work heralded the arrival of a movement that had been years in the making.

Martin Luther King, Jr.

Why MLK Believed Jazz Was the Perfect Soundtrack for Civil Rights

October 16, 2019

Jazz, King declared, was the ability to take the “hardest realities of life and put them into music, only to come out with some new hope or sense of triumph.”

Charles Drew sitting with medical residents at Freedmen's Hospital

The 1910 Report That Disadvantaged Minority Doctors

May 3, 2019

A century ago, the Flexner Report led to the closure of 75% of U.S. medical schools. It still explains a lot about today’s unequal access to healthcare.

Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield

Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, “The Black Swan”

May 6, 2019

Born into slavery, Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield broke barriers with every note she sang.

More Black History Roundups

Seydou Keïta

Celebrating Black Artists

February 12, 2021

Profiles of Betye Saar, Krista Franklin, Miles Davis, Basquiat, Kanye West, Faith Ringgold and more.

City Federation of Colored Women's Clubs of Jacksonville, State Meeting, Palatka, Florida

Black Women, Black Freedom

February 8, 2021

Celebrating Black History Month with a look at the role of women in movements for liberation.

Dorothy B Porter

15 Black Women Who Should Be (More) Famous

June 19, 2020

Honoring the scientists, poets, activists, doctors, and librarians--those we know and those we don't.

We’ll be adding more stories related to Black History Month throughout February.

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