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"This annotated bibliography covers more than 600 titles dealing with Afro-Americans. ... The selections included represent a useful and solid list of sources. ... The annotations are the best feature of this book Some extend to 200 words, and all are clearly written. They are mostly nonevaluative and simply relate the facts about the material under consideration. ... This is a solid and usable introductory source [that] will be useful in academic and public libraries."-Reference Books Bulletin
The only book of its kind in the field of Afro-American labor studies, this introductory reference surveys the diverse field of Afro-American labor literature from the end of the Civil War to the present.
"Although much has been written about blacks in the military, there is no single definitive compilation of their contributions. This two-part bibliography attempts to fill that void. ... Limited to printed sources, the bibliography is designed primarily for students and general readers.... The compiler pulls together effectively much of the existing diverse material on this subject. The author index is good.... [Students] requiring the location of general information about blacks in the military could very easily begin with this bibliography. Recommended for large public libraries and for academic libraries high school through undergraduate levels."-Choice
This comprehensive annotated bibliography, the first of its kind, provides lengthy entries on articles dealing with black health published during three time periods from post reconstruction to 1960. The compilers', Mitchell F. Rice and Woodrow Jones, Jr., introduction reviews the literature that composes the bibliography and discusses trends in the mortality, morbidity, and health care utilization behaviors of blacks from slavery to the mid-20th century. This cogent essay places the social context of black health care into perspective and enhances both linkages to the dominant themes of each period and a fuller understanding of the history of health care inequities in the U.S. A companion volume by the same compilers', Black American Health: An Annotated Bibliography (Greenwood Press, 1987), treats the more recent literature of the 1970s and 1980s.Following the in-depth introduction, the bibliography is divided into three chapters that annotate literature from the post reconstruction to the early 20th century, 1871-1919; from 1920 to 1950; and from 1951-1960. Each entry consists of an item number, author, title and source, date of publication, and page numbers as well as an exceptionally thorough and thoughtful annotation that averages ten lines in length. Subject and author indexes complete the work which will prove invaluable to students, scholars, and researchers in the fields of black history, medicine, and public health.
For students and scholars of Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, and Afro-America, whether they be anthropologists, sociologists, health care workers, ethnomusicologists, or historians, this bibliography offers a much needed resource guide to one of the most vital facets of black world culture.
Appendices, indicating the nature of his following, include Quotations and Sayings of Daddy Grace, Names and Titles Given to Daddy Grace, Products Named After Daddy Grace, Daddy Grace's Enterprises, Groups and Organizations Named After Daddy Grace, and Addresses of the United House of Prayer For All People.
This unique publication provides a thesaurus of all Library of Congress sub-Saharan African subject headings ever published, including classification numbers for most subject headings and cross-references from related or unused versions of a heading.
Invisible Wings is the only reference book on Blacks in aviation. The work covers three quarters of the twentieth century from 1916 to 1993, with one of the earliest articles describing the world's first Black pilot, Eugene J.
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Sources include titles generally considered to be reference tools, such as dictionaries, encyclopedias, catalogs, indexes, abstracts, bibliographies, and resource guides, as well as selected resources such as classic history texts and anthologies that fall outside the traditional reference area.
?Malval's guide provides the reader with a comprehensive listing of Hampton Institute's own records. The first half of the book consists of 34 different record groups, including education, state and national organizations, faculty, and pictorial records. Entries within each of these record groups are numerous and arranged alphabetically. The second half of the work has an index to the record groups and a general index arranged alphabetically by subject. Although the Guide will be useful for historians of black and Native American cultures, its appeal will be greatest for the handful of scholars interested in the traditions of Hampton Institute itself.?-Choice
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