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• Acknowledgments
• • Brief Chronology of the Life of Hubert Harrison • Abbreviations Used • A Note on Usage • Introduction • A Developing Worldview and Beginning Social Activism • A Product of Black Working-Class Intellectual Circles In New York • 1. A Negro On Chicken Stealing • 2. Pledge to the Mother Race from an Untamed African • 3. Plan to Write a “History of the Negro in America” • Free thought • 4. Letter to Mrs. Frances Reynolds Keyser • 5. Paine’s Place in the Deistical Movement • 6. The Negro a Conservative • The Press • 7. The Negro and the Newspapers • Class Radicalism • Socialism • 8. The Negro and Socialism: I – The Negro Problem Stated • 9. Race Prejudice – II • 10. The Duty of the Socialist Party • 11. How to Do It – And How Not • 12. The Black Man’s Burden (I) • 13. The Black Man’s Burden (II) • 14. Socialism and the Negro • 15 Southern Socialists and the Ku Klux Klan • The Labor Movement • 16. The Negro and the Labor Unions • 17. The Negro in Industry, review of The Great Steel Strike and Its Lessons by William Z. Foster • Race Radicalism • The Liberty League and The Voice • 18 The Liberty League of Negro Americans: How It Came to Be • 19. Resolutions [Passed at the Liberty League Meeting] • 20. Declaration of Principles [of the Liberty League] • 21. The Liberty League’s Petition to the House of Representatives of the United States, July 4, 1917 • East St. Louis, Houston and Armed Self-Defense • 22. The East St. Louis Horror • 23. Houston Vs. Waco • The New Negro • 24. As the Currents Flow • 25. Our Larger Duty • 26. The Need for it [and the Nature of It] • 27. Two Negro Radicalisms • 28. The Women of Our Race • 29. In The Melting Pot (re Herodotus) • The Negro World • 30. Race First versus Class First • 31. Just Crabs • 32. Patronize Your Own • 33. An Open Letter to the Socialist Party of New York City • The Boston Chronicle and the Voice of the Negro • 34. Race Consciousness • Education • 35. Negro Culture and the Negro College • 36. Education and the Race • 37. English as She Is Spoke • 38. Education out of School • 39. Read! Read! Read! • Politics • Lincoln and Liberty • 40. Lincoln and Liberty: Fact Versus Fiction; Chapter Two • 41. Lincoln and Liberty: Fact Versus Fiction; Chapter Three • “New Negro” Politics • 42. The Drift In Politics • 43. The New Policies for the New Negro • 44. The Coming Election • 45. Our Professional “Friends” • Politics in the 1920s • 46. A Negro for President • 47. U-Need-a-Biscuit • 48. The Grand Old Party • 49. When the Tail Wags the Dog • 50. Our Political Power • 51. The Black Tide Turns in Politics • Leaders and Leadership • On Booker T. Washington • 52. Insistence upon Its Real Grievances the Only Course for the Race • The Liberty Congress and W. E. B. DuBois • 53. The Liberty Congress • 54. The Descent of Dr. DuBois • 55. When the Blind Lead • Problems of Leadership • 56. To The Young Men of My Race • 57. Shillady Resigns • 58. A Tender Point • 59. Our White Friends • Time as Editor of the Negro World and Comments on Marcus Garvey • 60. Connections with the Garvey Movement • 61. On Garvey’s Character and Abilities • 62. The UNIA Convention • 63. Convention Bill Of Rights and Elections • 64. Marcus Garvey at the Bar of United States Justice • 65. The Negro American Speaks • Anti-imperialism and Internationalism • The Great War • 66. The White War and the Colored World • The White War and the Colored Races • The Paris Peace Congress • 68. The Negro at the Peace Congress • 69. Africa at the Peace Table • 70. Britain In India • 71. When Might Makes Right • 72. The Line-Up on the Color Line • 73. On “Civilizing Africa” • 74. Imperialist America, review of The American Empire by Scott Nearing • 75. Wanted- A Colored International • Disarmament and the Washington Conference • 76. The Washington Conference • 77. Disarmament and the Darker Races • The Caribbean • 78. Help Wanted for Hayti • 79. The Cracker in the Caribbean • 80. Hands across the Sea • The Virgin Islands • 81. A St. Croix Creole, letter to the Evening Post • 82. The Virgin Islands: A Colonial Problem • Caribbean Peoples in the United States • 83. Prejudice Growing Less and Co-operation More • 84. Hubert Harrison Answers Malliet • Meditations • 85. Goodwill Towards Men • 86. Meditation: “Heroes and Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in Human History” • 87. The Meditations of Mustapha: A Soul in Search of Itself • 88. On Praise • Lynching, the Klan, “Race Relations,” and “Democracy in America” • 89. A Cure for the Ku Klux • 90. Ku Klux Klan in the Past • 91. How to End Lynching • 92. The Negro and the Census • 93. Bridging the Gulf of Color • 94. At the Back of the Black Man’s Mind • 95. “Democracy” in America • 96. The Negro and the Nation • Literary Criticism, Book Reviews, and Book Reviewing • 97. Views of Readers on Criticism: Mr. H.H. Harrison Reiterates His Theories • 98. On a Certain Condescension in White Publishers [Part I] • 99. On a Certain Condescension in White Publishers (Concluded) • 100. Review of Term of Peace and the Darker Races by A. Philip Randolph and Chandler Owen • 101. The Negro in History and Civilization, review of From Superman to Man by J.A. Rogers • 102. White People versus Negroes: Being the Story of a Great Book (from Superman to Man by J.A Rogers • 103. Review of The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy by Lothrop Stoddard • 104. The Rising Tide of Color • 105. The Brown Man Leads The Way, Part I, review of The New World of Islam by Lothrop Stoddard • 106. The Brown Man Leads The Way, Part I, review of The New World of Islam by Lothrop Stoddard (concluding part) • 107. Review of Darkwater by W.E.B. Du Bois • 108. Review of The Negro Year Book, 1918-1919 edited by Monroe N. Work • 109. The Superscientist, review of The Place of Science in Modern Civilization and Other Essays by Thorstein Veblen • 110. The Black Man’s Burden, {review of The Black Man’s Burden by E.D. Morel} • 111. The Caucasian Canker in South Africa, review of The Real South Africa by Ambrose Pratt • 112. M. Maran’s Batouala • 113. The Southern Black- As Seen by the Eye of Fiction, review of Highly Colored by Octavus Roy Cohen • 114. The Real Negro Humor • 115. Negro Church history: A Book of It Badly Marred by Neglect of the Race Foundation, review of The History of the Negro Church by Carter G. Woodson • 116. Negro’s Part in History, review of The Negro in Our History by Carter G. Woodson • 117. Homo Africanus Harlemi, review of Nigger Heaven by Carl Van Vechten • 118. Nigger Heaven A Review of the Reviewers • 119. No Negro Literary Renaissance • 120. Cabaret School of Negro Literature and Art • 121. Harlem’s Neglected Opportunities • 122. Review of The Story of Mankind by Hendrik Van Loon • 123. Satyricon of Petronius, letter to the New York Times • 124. On Reading Negro Books • 125. Hayti Finds a Friend: Black Hayti: A Biography of Africa’s Eldest Daughter. • Theater Reviews • 126. Negro Society and the Negro Stage, Preamble • 127. Negro Society and the Negro Stage, Part 2 • 128. Canary Cottage: A Dramatic Opinion • 129. The Emperor Jones • 130. The Negro Actor on Broadway: A critical Interpretation by a Negro Critic • Poets and Poetry • 131. The Black Man’s Burden ( a reply to Rudyard Kipling) • 132. Another Negro Poet • 133. Poetry of Claude McKay • 134. Black Bards of Yesterday and Today, review of The Book of American Negro Poetry, selected and edited by James Weldom Johnson • The International Colored Unity League and the Way Forward • 135. Program and Principles of the International Colored Unity League • 136. The Right Way to Unity • 137. The Common People • 138. The Roots of Poliical Power |
A Hubert Harrison Reader
serious scholar of African American history and radical political thought." Christopher Phelps, Ohio State University |