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Showing results 1-10 of 16
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Why Hard History Matters: Addressing the Legacy of Jim Crow

    Episode 16, Season 4 Congressman Hakeem Jeffries represents New York’s 8th congressional district. Our final episode this season takes us to the U.S. House of Representatives for a conversation between Rep. Jeffries and his brother, our host, Dr. Hasan Jeffries, to discuss the lingering effects of the Jim Crow era—including voter access, prison and policing…

    May 11, 2022
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Black Political Thought

    Episode 14, Season 4 Black political ideologies in the early 20th century evolved against a backdrop of derogatory stereotypes and racial terrorism. Starting with Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Agency, historian Minkah Makalani contextualizes an era of Black intellectualism. From common goals of racial unity to fierce debates over methods, he shows how…

    March 31, 2022
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Medical Racism: A Legacy of Malpractice

    Episode 13, Season 4 This nation has a long history of exploiting Black Americans in the name of medicine. A practice which began with the Founding Fathers using individual enslaved persons for gruesome experimentation evolved into state-sanctioned injustices such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, among others. Award-winning historian Dr. Deirdre Cooper Owens details a chronology…

    March 14, 2022
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Criminalizing Blackness: Prisons, Police and Jim Crow

    Episode 15, Season 4 After emancipation, aspects of the legal system were reshaped to maintain control of Black lives and labor. Historian Robert T. Chase outlines the evolution of convict leasing in the prison system. And historian Brandon T. Jett explores the commercial factors behind the transition from extra-legal lynchings to police enforcement of the…

    March 2, 2022
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    The Harlem Renaissance: Restructuring, Rebirth and Reckoning

    Episode 12, Season 4 During the Harlem Renaissance, more Black artists than ever before were asking key questions about the role of art in society. Oftentimes the Harlem Renaissance is misconstrued as a discrete moment in American history–not as the next iteration of a thriving Black artistic tradition that it was. Literature scholar Julie Buckner…

    February 16, 2022
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Changing the Game: Sports in the Jim Crow Era

    Episode 11, Season 4 In the United States, Black athletes have had to contend with two sets of rules: those of the game and those of a racist society. While they dealt with 20th century realities of breaking the color line and the politics of respectability, Black fans, educational institutions, and the Black press were…

    January 20, 2022
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    The New Deal, Jim Crow and the Black Cabinet

    Episode 10, Season 4 Opportunities created by the New Deal were often denied to African Americans. And that legacy of exclusion from jobs, loans and services can be seen today in federal programs and policies as well as systemic inequities in housing, education, health and the accumulation of wealth. Historian Jill Watts examines the complicated…

    January 11, 2022
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Black Soldiers: Global Conflict During Jim Crow

    Episode 9, Season 4 U.S. involvement in world wars and the domestic Black freedom struggle shaped one another. By emphasizing the diverse stories of servicemen and women, historian Adriane Lentz-Smith situates Black soldiers as agents of American empire who were simultaneously building their own institutions at home. While white elected officials worked to systemically embed…

    December 13, 2021
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Building Black Institutions: Autonomy, Labor and HBCUs

    Episode 8, Season 4 Historian Tera Hunter describes Black institution-building post-slavery and throughout the Jim Crow era, illustrating how Black workers reorganized labor to their advantage, despite virulent white resistance. During the same period, historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) produced future leaders while cultivating resistance to white supremacy—and continue to do so. Educator Jelani…

    November 30, 2021
    • Teaching Hard History

    Story

    Premeditation and Resilience: Tulsa, Red Summer and the Great Migration

    Episode 7, Season 4 Naming the 1921 Tulsa massacre a “race riot” is inaccurate. Historian David Krugler urges listeners to call this and other violent attacks what they were: premeditated attempts at ethnic cleansing. Decades before, African Americans moved North in record numbers during the Great Migration. Krugler delves into connections between diaspora and violence…

    November 8, 2021
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