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African American History: A Very Short Introduction Audiobook, by Jonathan Scott Holloway Play Audiobook Sample

African American History: A Very Short Introduction Audiobook

African American History: A Very Short Introduction Audiobook, by Jonathan Scott Holloway Play Audiobook Sample
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Read By: Diontae Black Publisher: Tantor Audio Listen Time: at 1.0x Speed 2.83 hours at 1.5x Speed 2.13 hours at 2.0x Speed Release Date: February 2023 Format: Unabridged Audiobook ISBN: 9798350804102

Quick Stats About this Audiobook

Total Audiobook Chapters:

8

Longest Chapter Length:

44:35 minutes

Shortest Chapter Length:

09:48 minutes

Average Chapter Length:

31:19 minutes

Audiobooks by this Author:

2

Other Audiobooks Written by Jonathan Scott Holloway: > View All...

Publisher Description

What does it mean to be an American? The story of the African American past demonstrates the difficulty of answering this seemingly simple question. This book illuminates the US's core paradoxes, inviting profound questions about what it means to be an American, a citizen, and a human being.

This book considers how, for centuries, African Americans have fought for what the black feminist intellectual Anna Julia Cooper called "the cause of freedom." It begins in Jamestown in 1619, when the first shipment of enslaved Africans arrived in that settlement. It narrates the creation of a system of racialized chattel slavery, the eventual dismantling of that system in the national bloodletting of the Civil War, and the ways that civil rights disputes have continued to erupt in the more than 150 years since Emancipation. This Very Short Introduction carries forward to the Black Lives Matter movement, a grass-roots activist convulsion that declared that African Americans' present and past have value and meaning. At a moment when political debates grapple with the nation's obligation to acknowledge and perhaps even repair its original sin of racialized slavery, author Jonathan Scott Holloway tells a story about American citizens' capacity and willingness to realize the ideal articulated in America's founding document, namely, that all people were created equal.

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About Diontae Black

James Fouhey is an actor and narrator living in New York City. He received classical training at Boston University and the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts. He has recorded more than forty audiobooks across a variety of genres, including science fiction, romance, young adult fiction, and children’s fiction.