Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America (97 page)

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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

BOOK: Stamped From the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America
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Curtis, Benjamin,
204–205

Cutler, James Elbert,
297–298

Cuvier, Georges,
138–139
,
147

cyber racists,
461

Daniels, Jessie,
461

Dark Ghetto
(Clark),
394–395

Dark Princess: A Romance
(Du Bois),
328

Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil
(Du Bois),
316–317

Darwin, Charles,
209–211

Davenport, Charles,
301–302

Davies, Samuel,
87
,
98

Davis, Angela,
8
,
501

academia,
411–413
,
417–418
activist upbringing,
381–383
analysis of gender, race, class, sexuality and culture,
470
arrest for murder,
413–417
criticism of biological basis of behavior,
432–433
criticism of the Communist Party,
449–450
FBI war on the Black Power movement,
411
graduate work,
393–394
,
398
King’s assassination,
405–406
Million Man March,
461–462
national conference for Black women scholars,
453–454
Obama election,
495–496
political campaign,
429–430
,
434
progression of racism,
444–445
protesting the war in Iraq,
487–488
Republicans’ attempts to unseat,
459–460
sexual agency of young Black women,
445–446
UN World Conference,
477
Wallace’s attacks on Black men and Black women,
420–421

Davis, Jefferson,
3
,
208–209
,
214–215
,
271–272

Davis, Ossie,
389

Davis, Sallye,
381–382

DeBow, James D. B.,
185

Debs, Eugene V.,
315

The Debt: What America Owes to Blacks
(Robinson),
477

Declaration of Independence,
104–108
,
115
,
157
,
161
,
166
,
214
,
265
,
397

Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen,
118–119

The Declining Significance of Race
(Wilson),
427–428

decolonization of the non-White world,
284–285
,
312–313
,
351–352
,
360–361

Democracy in America
(Tocqueville),
167–168

Democratic National Convention,
320
,
388
,
480–481

Democratic Party,
212
,
240
,
244–245
,
252–253
,
255
,
337–338
,
450

Derek, Bo,
421

Descent of Man
(Darwin),
211

desegregation,
289–290
,
328–329
,
365–377

sports,
356

Dew, Thomas Roderick,
174–176

Dewey, Thomas E.,
356

Dilulio, John J.,
462

disaster capitalism,
484–486

discrimination, racial and economic

against freed slaves,
120–121
as the cause racial disparities,
168–169
Bakke’s accusation of,
425–426
Civil Rights Acts,
239
,
256
,
384–386
class distinctions among Blacks,
428
eradication as antiracist reform strategy,
509–510
inherited poverty and the legacy of discrimination,
390–392
legalization of,
8–9
presidential election campaigns,
476–477
Regents v. Bakke
,
425–427
Supreme Court rescinding the 1875 Civil Rights Act,
265

disparities, racial and economic,
11

crime statistics affecting Blacks over Whites,
435–438
Davis’s claim of progression of racism,
444–445
Garrison’s emphasis on gradual equality,
169–170
George H. W. Bush’s election campaign,
442
inherited poverty and the legacy of discrimination,
390–392
race-conscious policies,
427
Reagan administration increasing,
431–432
Reconstruction failing to address,
250–251

diversity among Black people,
5–6

Dixon, Thomas Jr.,
287–288
,
305–306

DNA discovery,
354

Dobzhansky, Theodosius,
353–354

doll tests,
362
,
394

Dominican Republic,
251

Double V Campaign,
349–350

Douglas, Stephen A.,
202
,
205–206

Douglass, Frederick,
182–186
,
238

Black suffrage,
232–233
Booker T. Washington and,
277
divergence from Garrison’s position,
200–201
Dominican Republic annexation,
251
Force Bill,
273
Lincoln’s campaign,
212
lynchings as response to Black crime,
274
polygenesis,
199
reparations bill,
269–270
response to
Types of Mankind
,
199–200
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
,
195–196
women suffrage,
246–247

Doukman, Dutty,
119

Downing, George,
246

Drake,
495

Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance
(Obama),
482–483

Dred Scott v. Sanford
,
203–205
,
253

Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA),
434

drugs, war on,
433
,
436–437

Drumgo, Fleeta,
411

drunk driving,
437–438

D’Souza, Dinesh,
460–461

Du Bois, W. E. B.,
7
,
399

antiracist socialism,
336–342
arrest of,
359
arrival in Ghana,
370–371
Black Reconstruction in America
,
331–332
Booker T. Washington and,
278
,
288
conflating Black separatists with antiracists,
374–375
cultural advancement,
323–324
Darkwater
,
316–317
death of,
376–377
dissatisfaction with desegregation,
370
education of,
267
,
271–272
,
276
educational persuasion strategy,
506–507
eugenics,
302–303
exclusion from the comprehensive study of the Negro,
349–351
Franz Boas and,
295–296
Frederick Hoffman’s prediction of Black extinction,
281–283
Germany under Hitler,
340–341
John Brown biography,
300–301
labeling as angry and anti-White,
492–493
learning about racial differences,
263–264
lynchings as response to Black crime,
274
Mao Tse-tung visit,
368
Marcus Garvey and,
309–310
,
318–320
Montgomery Bus Boycott,
365–366
multiracial pluralism,
321–322
Niggerati rejecting assimilationism,
324–330
nonviolent resistance,
369
on Reconstruction,
263–264
racial nature of crime,
297
racism in popular culture,
344–345
Red Summer,
316
Richard Wright and,
347–348
Southern Negro Youth Congress,
382

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