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Christian Appy: Vietnam War from All Sides

Description

Christian Appy, associate professor of history at MIT, discusses perceptions and memories of the Vietnam War from all possible sides: American civilians, antiwar protestors, and soldiers, as well as Vietnamese civilians and soldiers.

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Freedom Riders: 1961 and the Struggle for Racial Justice

Description

Professor Raymond Arsenault discusses the Freedom Rides of 1961, in which participants rode public buses into the South to protest transportation segregation. He focuses on the personal stories of the Freedom Riders.

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At Canaan's Edge: America in the King Years, 1965-1968

Description

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Taylor Branch discusses the final years of Martin Luther King Jr.'s life, focusing on King's attempts to move the Civil Rights Movement into protest of the Vietnam War and King's calls for broader social and economic justice.

Video and audio options are available.

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1963 March on Washington: Lewis Looks Back

Description

Congressman John Lewis, who at 23 spoke at the 1963 March on Washington as chairman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, leads a discussion on the planning, implementation, and effect the first March on Washington had on the country. The presentation includes footage of Lewis's 1963 speech at the March.

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Encarta Africana: From Du Bois to John Coltrane

Description

Henry Louis Gates Jr., director of the Du Bois Institute at Harvard, discusses the African and African-American experience from W.E.B. Du Bois to John Coltrane in a comprehensive study, with an emphasis on Du Bois's concept of the "Encyclopedia Africana"—an encyclopedia of all Black culture and history—as a weapon against racism.

  • Read more about Encarta Africana: From Du Bois to John Coltrane

Free!: Salem Women and Abolition

Description

Art historian Abaigeal Duda looks at the work of African-American artist Lucy Cleveland (1780-1866), whose textile sculptures provide a record of the abolition movement prior to and during the Civil War.

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Memory and Abolition in 1850s Boston

Description

PhD candidate Margot Minardi discusses Boston abolitionist activity, particularly its use of Revolutionary War resonances in its propaganda and oratory. The presentation includes slides.

Audio and video options are available.

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William Lloyd Garrison at 200: Meanings for Our Own Time

Description

Professor David W. Blight examines the character and legacy of fervent abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879). Blight looks at his private character and his public image, and how his ideals and technique might be received, used, and remembered today.

Audio and video options are available.

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Catering to History: The Remonds of Salem

Description

Julie Winch discusses the highly successful African-American Remond family and their business of catering lavish parties in Boston and Newport in the 1800s. Winch focuses on the Remonds as free African Americans and supporters of abolitionism during the era of slavery.

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Boston's 19th-century African-American Communities

Description

This lecture discusses African-American social organization and antislavery activism in Antebellum Boston.

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