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| 05569cam a2200577Ii 4500 |
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001 | 283192 |
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003 | |
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005 | 20210811204509.0 |
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008 | 210304t20212021nyu e b 000 e eng d |
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035 | | . |
‡a(OCoLC)2134338 |
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040 | | . |
‡aYDX
‡beng
‡erda
‡cYDX
‡dJBL
‡dOCLCO
‡dBDX
‡dOCLCF
‡dFDS
‡dIMP
‡dILC
‡dNTG
‡dNhHvHL |
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019 | | . |
‡a1257264271 |
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020 | | . |
‡a1642937789
‡q(hardcover) |
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020 | | . |
‡a9781642937787
‡q(hardcover) |
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020 | | . |
‡z9781642937794
‡q(eBook) |
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020 | | . |
‡a9781637582619 |
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020 | | . |
‡a1637582617 |
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035 | | . |
‡a(OCoLC)1240413929
‡z(OCoLC)1257264271 |
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050 | | 4. |
‡aE185
‡b.R43 2021 |
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082 | 0 | 4. |
‡a973.0496
‡223 |
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092 | | . |
‡a973.0496 RED |
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049 | | . |
‡aNTGA |
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245 | 0 | 0. |
‡aRed, white, and black :
‡brescuing American history from revisionists and race hustlers /
‡cRobert L. Woodson Sr., editor. |
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264 | | 1. |
‡a[New York?] :
‡bEmancipation Books,
‡c[2021] |
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264 | | 4. |
‡c©2021 |
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300 | | . |
‡axxvi, 213 pages ;
‡c24 cm |
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336 | | . |
‡atext
‡btxt
‡2rdacontent |
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337 | | . |
‡aunmediated
‡bn
‡2rdamedia |
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338 | | . |
‡avolume
‡bnc
‡2rdacarrier |
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500 | | . |
‡a"Featuring 1776 Unites essays by John Sibley Butler, Jason D. Hill, Coleman Cruz Hughes, John McWhorter, Clarence Page, Wilfred Reilly, Shelby Steele, Carol M. Swain"--Page 1 of dust jacket. |
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504 | | . |
‡aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 195-212). |
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505 | 0 | 0. |
‡gForeword by Dr. Lucas E. Morel --
‡tIntroduction: The crucial voice of "1776" /
‡rby Robert L. Woodson Sr. --
‡t"A positive vision: The agenda of '1776'" /
‡rby Wilfred Reilly --
‡t"The moral meaning of America: two parallel narratives" /
‡rby Jason D. Hill --
‡t"Acknowledging slavery's limits in defining America" /
‡rby John Wood Jr. --
‡t"We cannot allow '1619' to dumb down America in the name of a crusade" /
‡rby John McWhorter --
‡t"Slavery does not define the Black American experience" /
‡rby Wilfred Reilly --
‡t"Black is the new idol" /
‡rby Yaya J. Fanusie --
‡t"The history of 1776 offers hope for all Americans" /
‡rby Rev. Corey Brooks --
‡t"Responses to adversity" /
‡rby Robert Cherry --
‡t"The cult of victimhood" /
‡rby Harold A. Black --
‡t"Living by the grace of God and the power of applying oneself" /
‡rby Dean Nelson --
‡t"True freedom comes form serving community and God" /
‡rby Rev. DeForest Blake Soaries Jr --
‡t"How Harlem's 'Hellfighters' gained their name--and helped win the Great War" /
‡rby Strephen L. Harris --
‡t"A dream as old as the American dream: why black patriotism is more important than victimization" /
‡rby Clarence Page --
‡t"Children achieve the expectations we teach: charting a path to a more perfect union begins with our guidance" /
‡rby Ian Rowe --
‡t"From rural poverty to Ivy League professor: Carol M. Swain's life lessons" /
‡rby Carol M. Swain --
‡t"Closing the black-white educational gap in the South in the early twentieth century" /
‡rby Stephanie Deutsch --
‡t"An algorithm of success: understanding Black America" /
‡rby John Sibley Butler --
‡t"Let's arm black children with lessons that can improve their lives" /
‡rby Coleman Cruz Hughes --
‡t"We live in an impure world" /
‡rby Joshua Mitchell --
‡tAn excerpt from Shame by Shelby Steele --
‡t"We must scrap the '1619 project' for an accurate account of American history" /
‡rby Charles Love --
‡t"Critical race theory's destructive impact on America" /
‡rby Carol M. Swain --
‡t"Straight out of the black bourgeoisie: lessons for the twenty-first century" /
‡rby John Sibley Butler --
‡t"First black Olympic champion, Alice Coachman: the little girl form the red hills of Georgia" /
‡rby Stephen L. Harris --
‡t"Keeping the promise of 1776" /
‡rby Bob Woodson and Ian Rowe --
‡gBiographies of contributing authors -- Endnotes -- Acknowledgments. |
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520 | | . |
‡a"In the rush to redefine the place of black Americans in contemporary society, many radical activists and academics have mounted a campaign to destroy traditional American history and replace it with a politicized version that few would recognize. According to the new radical orthodoxy, the United States was founded as a racist nation--and everything that has happened throughout our history must be viewed through the lens of the systemic oppression of black people. Rejecting this false narrative, a collection of the most prominent and respected black scholars and thinkers has come together to correct the record and tell the true story of black Americans in all its complexity, diversity of experience, and poignancy. Collectively, they paint a vivid picture of black people living the grand American experience, however bumpy the road may be along the way. But rather than a people apart, blacks are woven into the united whole that makes this nation unique in history"--page 4 of cover. |
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650 | | 0. |
‡aAfrican Americans
‡xHistory. |
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650 | | 0. |
‡aAfrican Americans
‡xSocial conditions. |
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650 | | 0. |
‡aAfrican Americans
‡xAttitudes. |
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651 | | 0. |
‡aUnited States
‡xRace relations. |
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651 | | 0. |
‡aUnited States
‡xCivilization
‡xAfrican American influences. |
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650 | | 7. |
‡aAfrican Americans.
‡2fast
‡0(OCoLC)fst00799558 |
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650 | | 7. |
‡aAfrican Americans
‡xAttitudes.
‡2fast
‡0(OCoLC)fst00799565 |
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650 | | 7. |
‡aAfrican Americans
‡xSocial conditions.
‡2fast
‡0(OCoLC)fst00799698 |
---|
650 | | 7. |
‡aCivilization
‡xAfrican American influences.
‡2fast
‡0(OCoLC)fst01352329 |
---|
650 | | 7. |
‡aRace relations.
‡2fast
‡0(OCoLC)fst01086509 |
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651 | | 7. |
‡aUnited States.
‡2fast
‡0(OCoLC)fst01204155 |
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655 | | 7. |
‡aEssays.
‡2lcgft |
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700 | 1 | . |
‡aWoodson, Robert L.,
‡eeditor. |
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994 | | . |
‡aC0
‡bNTG |
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901 | | . |
‡a2134338
‡bOCoLC
‡c283192
‡tbiblio |
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