This collection uncovers the rich, yet overlooked history of Canada’s Black Press, revealing its impact on intellectual activism and social justice movements from the nineteenth century to today.
This collection uncovers the rich, yet overlooked history of Canada’s Black Press, revealing its impact on intellectual activism and social justice movements from the nineteenth century to today.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Claudine Bonner is the Canada Research Chair in Racial Justice and African Diaspora Migration and an associate professor of sociology at Mount Allison University. Boulou Ebanda de b'Béri is a professor of Communication and Cultural Studies and the founding director of the Audiovisual Media Lab for the study of Cultures and Societies at the University of Ottawa. Nina Reid-Maroney is an associate professor in the Department of History at Huron University College, Western University.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements An Introduction to The Black Press: A Shadowed Canadian Tradition Claudine Bonner, Boulou Ebanda de B’béri, Nina Reid-Maroney Part One: The Black Press and the Abolitionist Context 1. An Education without Walls: The Voice of the Fugitive and the Provincial Freeman as an Unconventional Classroom Lorene Bridgen-Lennie 2. The Black Press and The Voice of the Bondsman Neil Brooks, Nina Reid-Maroney, Scott Schofield Part Two: Reconstructing the Black Press, 1870-1900 3. As Seen in the News: Representations of Blackness in the Mainstream Nova Scotian Newspapers, 1867-1910 Claudine Bonner 4. Georgiana Whetsel and the Case for Nineteenth-Century Black New Brunswick Newspaper Culture Jennifer Harris 5. "Read. Important." Anderson Ruffin Abbott’s Missionary Messenger Scrapbooks Nina Reid-Maroney Part Three: Representation and Activism in the Twentieth Century 6. "You Will Do the Race and Yourselves Much Good": The Black Athlete and Sport Discourse in The Clarion (1946-1949) Ornella Nzindukiyimana 7. Brand Advertising in Contrast in the 1970s: Selling Race and Culture Through Beer Cheryl Thompson List of Contributors Index
Acknowledgements An Introduction to The Black Press: A Shadowed Canadian Tradition Claudine Bonner, Boulou Ebanda de B’béri, Nina Reid-Maroney Part One: The Black Press and the Abolitionist Context 1. An Education without Walls: The Voice of the Fugitive and the Provincial Freeman as an Unconventional Classroom Lorene Bridgen-Lennie 2. The Black Press and The Voice of the Bondsman Neil Brooks, Nina Reid-Maroney, Scott Schofield Part Two: Reconstructing the Black Press, 1870-1900 3. As Seen in the News: Representations of Blackness in the Mainstream Nova Scotian Newspapers, 1867-1910 Claudine Bonner 4. Georgiana Whetsel and the Case for Nineteenth-Century Black New Brunswick Newspaper Culture Jennifer Harris 5. "Read. Important." Anderson Ruffin Abbott’s Missionary Messenger Scrapbooks Nina Reid-Maroney Part Three: Representation and Activism in the Twentieth Century 6. "You Will Do the Race and Yourselves Much Good": The Black Athlete and Sport Discourse in The Clarion (1946-1949) Ornella Nzindukiyimana 7. Brand Advertising in Contrast in the 1970s: Selling Race and Culture Through Beer Cheryl Thompson List of Contributors Index
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