Negro Education in Alabama Negro Education in Alabama
Library Alabama Classics

Negro Education in Alabama

A Study in Cotton and Steel

    • £28.99
    • £28.99

Publisher Description

Horace Mann Bond was an early twentieth century scholar and a college administrator who focused on higher education for African Americans. His Negro Education in Alabama won Brown University’s Susan Colver Rosenberger Book Prize in 1937 and was praised as a landmark by W. E. B. Dubois in American Historical Review and by scholars in journals such as Journal of Negro Education and the Journal of Southern History.

A seminal and wide-ranging work that encompasses not only education per se but a keen analysis of the African American experience of Reconstruction and the following decades, Negro Education in Alabama illuminates the social and educational conditions of its period. Observers of contemporary education can quickly perceive in Bond’s account the roots of many of today’s educational challenges.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2015
28 February
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
416
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Alabama Press
SIZE
5.1
MB

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