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AP African American Studies: Suggested Source Intake Form
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1.1 What Is African American Studies?
1.2 The African Continent: A Varied Landscape
1.3 Population Growth and Ethnolinguistic Diversity
1.4 Ancestral Africa: Ancient Societies and African American Studies
1.5 The Sudanic Empires
1.6 Global Visions of the Mali Empire
1.7 Learning Traditions
1.8 Indigenous Cosmologies and Religious Syncretism
1.9 Southern Africa: Great Zimbabwe
1.10 East Africa: Culture and Trade in the Swahili Coast
1.11 West Central Africa: The Kingdom of Kongo
1.12 Kinship and Political Leadership
1.13 Global Africans
2.1 African Explorers in America
2.2 Departure Zones in Africa and the Slave Trade to the U.S.
2.3 Capture and the Impact of the Slave Trade on West African Societies
2.4 Architecture and Iconography of a Slave Ship
2.5 Resistance on Slave Ships
2.6 Slave Auctions
2.7 The Domestic Slave Trade and Forced Migration
2.8 Labor, Culture, and Economy
2.9 Slavery and American Law: Slave Codes and Landmark Cases
2.10 The Concept of Race and the Reproduction of Status
2.11 Faith and Song Among Free and Enslaved African Americans
2.12 Music, Art, and Creativity in African Diasporic Cultures
2.13 Black Pride, Identity, and the Question of Naming
2.14 The Stono Rebellion and Fort Mose
2.15 Legacies of the Haitian Revolution
2.16 Resistance and Revolts in the U.S.
2.17 Black Organizing in the North: Freedom, Women’s Rights, and Education
2.18 Maroon Societies and Autonomous Black Communities
2.19 Diasporic Connections: Slavery and Freedom in Brazil
2.20 African Americans in Indigenous Territory
2.21 Emigration and Colonization
2.22 Anti-Emigrationism: Transatlantic Abolitionism and Belonging in America
2.23 Radical Resistance
2.24 Race to the Promised Land: Abolitionism and The Underground Railroad
2.25 Legacies of Resistance in African American Art and Photography
2.26 Gender and Resistance in Slave Narratives
2.27 The Civil War and Black Communities
2.28 Freedom Days: Commemorating the Ongoing Struggle for Freedom
3.1 The Reconstruction Amendments
3.2 Social Life: Reuniting Black Families
3.3 Black Codes, Land, and Labor
3.4 The Defeat of Reconstruction
3.5 Disenfranchisement and Jim Crow Laws
3.6 White Supremacist Violence and the Red Summer
3.7 The Color Line and Double Consciousness in American Society
3.8 Uplift Ideologies
3.9 Lifting as We Climb: Black Women's Rights and Leadership
3.10 Black Organizations and Institutions
3.11 HBCUs and Black Education
3.12 The New Negro Movement and the Harlem Renaissance
3.13 Photography and Social Change
3.14 Envisioning Africa in Harlem Renaissance Poetry
3.15 The Birth of Black History
3.16 Genealogy of the Field of African American Studies
3.17 The Great Migration
3.18 Afro-Caribbean Migration
3.19 The Universal Negro Improvement Association
4.1 The Négritude and Negrismo Movements
4.2 Discrimination, Segregation, and the Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
4.3 The G.I. Bill, Redlining, and Housing Discrimination
4.4 Major Civil Rights Organizations
4.5 Black Women’s Leadership in the Civil Rights Movement
4.6 The Arts and the Politics of Freedom
4.7 Faith and the Sounds of the Civil Rights Movement
4.8 Diasporic Solidarity: African Americans and Decolonization in Africa
4.9 The Black Power Movement
4.10 The Black Panther Party
4.11 Black is Beautiful and the Black Arts Movement
4.12 Black Women and the Movements in the 20th Century
4.13 Overlapping Dimensions of Black Life
4.14 The Growth of the Black Middle Class
4.15 Black Political Gains
4.16 Demographic and Religious Diversity in Contemporary Black Communities
4.17 The Evolution of African American Music
4.18 Black Achievements in Science, Medicine, and Technology
4.19 Black Studies, Black Futures, and Afrofuturism
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