Read Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America Online
Authors: Ibram X. Kendi
Tags: #Race & Ethnicity, #General, #Politics & Social Sciences, #Discrimination & Race Relations, #Discrimination & Racism, #United States, #Historical Study & Educational Resources, #Social Science, #Social History, #Americas, #Sociology, #History, #Race Relations, #Social Sciences
4
. Barack Obama, “Remarks by the President to the NAACP Centennial Convention,” July 16, 2009,
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-naacp-centennial-convention-07162009
; “Obama: Police Who Arrested Professor ‘Acted Stupidly,” CNN, July 23, 2009,
www.cnn.com/2009/US/07/22/harvard.gates.interview/
; Glenn Beck, “Fox Host Glenn Beck: Obama Is a ‘Racist,’” July 28, 2009,
www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/28/fox-host-glenn-beck-obama_n_246310.html
.
5
. Ta-Nehisi Coates, “The Case for Reparations,”
The Atlantic
, June 2014; Janet Mock,
Redefining Realness: My Path to Womanhood, Identity, Love & So Much More
(New York: Atria Books, 2014), 258.
6
. Alexander,
The New Jim Crow
, 6–7, 138, 214–222.
7
. “Richard Sherman: Thug Is Now ‘The Accepted Way of Calling Somebody the N-Word,’”
Huffington Post
, January 22, 2014,
www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/22/richard-sherman-thug-n-word-press-conference_n_4646871.html
.
8
. “Meet the Woman Who Coined #BlackLivesMatter,”
USA Today
, March 4, 2015,
www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2015/03/04/alicia-garza-black-lives-matter/24341593/
.
9
. Garrison,
An Address, Delivered Before the Free People of Color
, 5–6.
10
. Du Bois, “My Evolving Program for Negro Freedom,” 70; Myrdal,
An American Dilemma
, 1:48.
11
. W. E. B. Du Bois, “A Negro Nation Within the Nation,”
Current History
42 (1935): 265–270.
Abbott, Robert,
303
abolitionism and abolitionists
Clinton’s crime bill,
454
colonization plan,
145–146
conditions of free Blacks,
123–124
congressional slavery debate,
122
Davis’s analysis of the criminal justice system,
470–471
Declaration of Independence,
104–105
,
107
Dominican friars in Hispaniola,
26–27
expansion of,
177–178
growing appeal of,
178–179
Harpers Ferry,
207–208
inferiority of Blacks deriving from slavery,
98
Jefferson’s view of,
111–112
Mennonites,
52
Phillis Wheatley’s writings,
93–94
,
100
postal campaign,
177–178
Quakers,
88–89
scientific support for slavery,
182–183
seeds of American colonial rebellion,
99–100
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
,
193–194
uplift suasion,
124–126
uplift suasion strategy,
505
See also
Garrison, William Lloyd
Abu-Jamal, Mumia,
463
acting white achievement theory,
480–481
Adams, Dock,
257
affirmative action,
428–429
,
465–466
,
478–479
Africa
Buffon’s races,
85–86
colonization plan,
145–149
Du Bois’s arrival in Ghana,
370–371
Du Bois’s rationale for decolonization,
284–285
Linnaeus’s racial hierarchy,
82–84
migration to the US,
309
trans-Saharan trade routes,
19–20
Walker’s historical racism,
165–166
writings of Leo Africanus,
28–29
African Clarkson Society,
179
The Afrocentric Idea
(Asante),
442
Afrocentric theory,
442–443
Alexander, Michelle,
501
America in Black & White
(Thernstrom and Thernstrom),
468
American Bible Society,
153
American Colonization Society (ACS),
145–146
,
148–150
,
153–154
,
156–157
,
162
,
164
,
174–176
,
269
An American Dilemma
(Myrdal),
3
,
350
American Equal Rights Association (AERA),
241–242
,
245–247
American Federation of Labor (AFL),
330
American Freedmen’s Inquiry Commission (AFIC),
228–229
The American Negro: What He Was, What He Is, and What He May Become
(Thomas),
289–290
American Philosophical Society (APS),
80
,
108
,
112–115
,
135–136
American Revolution,
7
,
90–91
,
98–99
,
102
,
104–108
,
118
The American Schoolbook
(Black),
407
Amos ‘n’ Andy
(television program),
334
Amsterdam, Anthony G.,
442
Angelou, Maya,
415
Anthony, Susan B.,
241–242
,
245–247
Anti-Drug Abuse Act (1986),
435
anti-lynching bill,
341
antiracism
antiracist socialism,
336–342
biological basis of social behavior,
432
Boyle’s scientific racism,
45
challenging assimilationist and segregationist views,
3–4
Civil Rights Act,
384–385
Crash
discourse on race,
483–484
Davis’s analysis of gender, race, class, sexuality and culture,
470
during the Bush administration,
477
eradication of discrimination as reform strategy,
509–510
failed reform strategies,
503–504
,
507
Germantown Petition Against Slavery,
52
Hegel’s writings,
147–148
impact of
The Bell Curve
,
459
importance of emancipation,
165–166
“liberal antiracism,”
460–461
Malcolm X’s assassination,
389–390
Obama on race,
482–483
,
491–494
postracial society,
497–498
,
500
queer antiracism,
418–419
social media and social protests,
502–503
Woolman’s prerevolutionary rhetoric,
89–90
anti-rape struggles,
432–433
Appeal . . . to the Colored Citizens of the World
(Walker),
165–167
Are Prisons Obsolete
(Davis),
471
Armey, Richard,
457–458
Armstrong, Samuel Chapman,
243
Asante, Molefi Kete,
442
The Assassination of the Black Male Image
(Hutchinson),
454–455
assimilation failing to eliminate discrimination,
338–340
belief in Blacks’ incapacity,
223–224
Christianization of slaves,
46
,
48–49
Civil Rights Act,
385
Clinton’s Rainbow Coalition speech,
452
congressional slavery debate,
121–122
cultural assimilation,
344–347
decolonization of Africa and the Caribbean,
285
defining racism,
4–5
Dominican Republic annexation,
251
Douglass’s response to
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
,
195–196
Du Bois’s critiques of,
336–339
,
Ebonics in education,
472–473
gender racism of Black men,
402–403
Harlem Renaissance rejecting,
324–330
historically Black colleges and universities,
243
impact of
The Bell Curve
,
459
King’s fall from grace,
399
master/slave relationship theory,
33
multiculturalism and,
469
Muslim enslavement of Africans,
20–21
Myrdal’s solution to racism,
350–351
No Child Left Behind Act,
480