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Archive of posts tagged Elizabeth Stordeur pryor

2021 Association for the Study of African American Life and History Annual Meeting

Posted by admin on 16 September 2021, 2:16 pm

Throughout the rest of September, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History is hosting their annual meeting virtually. We hope you’ll visit our ASALH 2021 virtual booth to browse our new and recent titles in African American history.  Acquisitions editors Brandon Proia and Andrew Winters would love to connect with you if you have a project that… Continue Reading 2021 Association for the Study of African American Life and History Annual Meeting

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Filed under African American Studies, UNC Press News | Tagged a. kirsten mullen, african american studies, Andrew Winters, Ann bingham, ASALH, ASALH Annual Meeting, ASALH2021, Association for the Study of African American Life and History, brandon proia, color and character, colored travelers, Edna Lewis, Elizabeth Stordeur pryor, Freedom Farmers, from here to equality, gone home, imani perry, Karida L. Brown, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, kenneth robert janken, may we forever stand, Monica M. White, pamela grundy, Race for Profit, Sara B. Franklin, Sophie White, the wilmington ten, unc press news, virtual booth, Voices of the Enslaved, William a. Darity jr.

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🍽 TRY THESE SUMMER RECIPES 🍽 Advance copies are in of FROM HERE TO EQUALITY: Reparations for Black Americans in the Twenty-First Century—Second Edition by William A. Darity Jr. & A. Kirsten Mullen, which includes a new preface by the authors. Preorder it now➡️officially on sale 9/20/22 wherever books are sold. EATING WHILE BLACK: Food Shaming and Race in America, by @buildinghouses9 Psyche A. Williams-Forson, illuminates how anti-black racism  exists within the practice and culture of eating. Belated happy birthday to Juliana!🎂👇🏽Repost @mexirican517: Couldn’t have picked a better time to start reading the 10th book in my effort to read 49 books in my 49th year - ‘Space - Time Colonialism: Alaska’s Indigenous and Asian Entanglements’, by  Juliana Hu Pegues (UNC Press) - as it happens to be the author’s birthday! I’m blessed to call Juliana a dear friend of nearly 25 years, and she is one of the smartest & most politically grounded people I know, so I’m sure this book will teach me much, as I shift from one corner of American settler colonialism (Puerto Rico) to another (Alaska). Have you read this book?  Also, say hi to Cuca in the background.  #books #bookstagram #49books #49BooksInAYear #49BooksInMy49thYear  #Space-TimeColonialism #SpaceTimeColonialism #JulianaHuPegues #Alaska #Cuca #DogsAndBooks #BooksAndDogs 🚨 🏆 GIVEAWAY WINNERS 🏆 🚨 Happy Friday from Brooks Hall 😎(^here’s our sharp looking new sign!) #ASA2022 starts tomorrow, and although we will no longer be attending in-person, you can browse our booth online and take advantage of the conference discount 💻 🛒 📚 Print newspaper media memorabilia uncovered from 50 years ago, published on the occasion of that anniversary milestone in the defunct #GreensboroDailyNews, “UNC Press: A Shining Light” (zoom in to read!). Psst! We think THE UNFINISHED BUSINESS OF UNSETTLED THINGS: Art From an African American South would look great on your coffee table ☕️ 📚
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