After the Fact Cover
From to Slavery to Freedom 8/e
Franklin and Moss

Table of Contents

Chapter One: Land of Their Ancestors
Ghana
Mali
Songhay
Other States
Chapter Two: The African Way of Life
Political Institutions
Economic Life
Social Organization
Religion
The Arts
African Culture in the Diaspora
Chapter Three: The Slave Trade and the New World
European and Asian Interests
Africans in the New World
The Big Business of Slave Trading
One-Way Passage
Colonial Enterprise in the Caribbean
The Plantation System
Slavery in Mainland Latin America
Chapter Four: Colonial Slavery
Virginia and Maryland
The Carolinas and Georgia
The Middle Colonies
Blacks in Colonial New England
Chapter Five: That All May Be Free
Slavery and the Revolutionary Philosophy
Blacks Fighting for American Independence
The Movement to Manumit Slaves
The Conservative Reaction
Chapter Six: Blacks in the New Republic
The Black Population in 1790
Slavery and the Industrial Revolution
Trouble in the Caribbean
The Closing of the Slave Trade
The Search for Independence
Chapter Seven: Blacks and Manifest Destiny
Frontier Influences
Black Pioneers in the Westward March
The War of 1812
Emergence of the Cotton Kingdom
The Domestic Slave Trade
Persistence of the African Trade
Chapter Eight: That Peculiar Institution
Scope and Extent
The Slave Codes
Plantation Scene
Nonagricultural Pursuits
Social Considerations
The Slave's Reaction to Bondage
Chapter Nine: Quasi-Free Blacks
American Anomaly
Economic and Social Development
The Struggle in the North and West
Colonization
Chapter Ten: Slavery and Intersectional Strife
The North Attacks
Black Abolitionists
Runaways---Overland and Underground
The South Strikes Back
Stress and Strain in the 1850s
Chapter Eleven: Civil War
Uncertain Federal Policy
Moving Toward Freedom
Confederate Policy
Blacks Fighting for the Union
Victory!
Chapter Twelve: The Effort to Attain Peace
Reconstruction and the Nation
Conflicting Policies
Relief and Rehabilitation
Economic Adjustment
Political Currents
Chapter Thirteen: Losing the Peace
The Struggle for Domination
The Overthrow of Reconstruction
The Movement of Disenfranchisement
The Triumph of White Supremacy
Chapter Fourteen: Philanthropy and Self-Help
Northern Philanthropy and African-American Education
The Age of Booker T. Washington
Struggles in the Economic Sphere
Social and Cultural Growth
Chapter Fifteen: The Color Line
The New American Imperialism
America's Empire of Darker Peoples
Urban Problems
The Pattern of Violence
New Solutions for Old Problems
Chapter Sixteen: In Pursuit of Democracy
World War I
The Enlistment of African Americans
Service Overseas
On the Home Front
Chapter Seventeen: Democracy Escapes
The Reaction
The Voice of Protest Rises
Chapter Eighteen: The Harlem Renaissance
Socioeconomic Problems and African-American Literature
Harlem, the Seat and Center
The Circle Widens
Chapter Nineteen: The New Deal
Depression
Political Regeneration
Roosevelt's "Black Cabinet"
Government Agencies and Relief for Blacks
Black Labor and the Unions
Chapter Twenty: The American Dilemma
Trends in Education
Opportunities for Self-Expression
The World of African Americans
One World or Two?
Chapter Twenty-One: Fighting for the Four Freedoms
Arsenal of Democracy
Blacks in the Service
The Home Fires
The United Nations and Human Welfare
Chapter Twenty-Two: African Americans in the Cold War Era
Progress
Reaction
Urbanization and its Consequences
Writers and Artists in Later Years
Heard and Seen by Millions
Chapter Twenty-Three: The Black Revolution
The Road to Revolution
The Beginnings
Marching for Freedom
The Illusion of Equality
Revolution at High Tide
Balance Sheet of the Revolution
Chapter Twenty-Four: New Forms of Activism
The Reagan Years
A New Economic and Political Thrust
The Bush Quadrennium
Stirrings
African Americans and the World
"On the Pulse of Morning"
Chapter Twenty-Five: Legacies for the Twenty-First Century

Appendixes

The Emancipation Proclamation
Fair Employment Executive Order
Government's Resonsibility: Securing the Rights
Brown v. Board of Education
John F. Kennedy: Special Message to the Congress on Civil Rights
The Civil Rights Act of 1964
The Voting Rights Act of 1965

 

 

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