頁籤選單縮合
題名 | Oklahoma's African-American Newspapers: A Voice for Cultural Identity and Educational Reform 1892 to 1955= |
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作者 | Cassity, Roe R. O. Jr.; |
期刊 | 輔仁歷史學報 |
出版日期 | 20010600 |
卷期 | 12 2001.06[民90.06] |
頁次 | 頁223-244 |
分類號 | 546.5952 |
語文 | eng |
關鍵詞 | Harlem renaissance; County excise board; Segregated funding; Langston university; Library board; Sham of legal compliance; Legal egal snares; Stillborn hopes; |
英文摘要 | Over the past two decades, a number of historians, most notably Professor Nudie Williams, have made valuable contributions toward our understanding of the African-American experience in the Southwest While Professor Williams critically important work has focused primarily on the role of the African-American press in the building of local communities and their influence, in turn on regional development, the following article will seek to analyze the unique patterns of the local black press and its role as an advocate racial pride, cultural development, and educational reform. This study begins with 1892 as that was the beginning date for publication of the Oklahoma Guide and ends with 1955, as the latter marks the retirement date of Roscoe Dungee, Oklahoma's pre-eminent African American editor. This six decades period also marks the rise and fall of legal segregation in Oklahoma. |
本系統之摘要資訊系依該期刊論文摘要之資訊為主。