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William Edward Burghardt Du Bois 18681963

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If you haven't already done so, you should bookmark the syllabus for this course ... me,--riotous in color, gay in laughter, full of sympathy, need and pleading. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: William Edward Burghardt Du Bois 18681963


1
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois (1868-1963)
  • History 106
  • April 3, 2009

2
A Reminder
  • If you havent already done so, you should
    bookmark the syllabus for this course in your
    browser. It will update regularly before each
    class session. Its at http//www.uoregon.edu/dap
    ope/106syllabus--sp09.htm
  • The instructions for the short paper on Chinua
    Achebe, Things Fall Apart are at
    http//www.uoregon.edu/dapope/106paper--achebe.ht
    m

3
Some Websites of Interest
  • Du Boiss photos of African Americans displayed
    at the Paris 1900 Fair.
  • Du Boiss article on The American Negro at
    Paris, about the fair exhibit.
  • At the Paris 1900 Fair, 500 books written by
    African Americans were also exhibited
  • Resources about Du Bois at the University of
    Massachusetts
  • A comprehensive website about Du Bois
  • E-texts of his most famous book, The Souls of
    Black Folk (1903) and his early study of The
    Philadelphia Negro (1899)
  • Du Bois was a leader in several Pan African
    Congress meetings. Some information on the
    Congresses here.

4
  • At the beginning of W.E.B. Du Boiss most famous
    book, The Souls of Black Folk (1903), he made
    this bold statement
  • The problem of the twentieth century is the
    problem of the color line.

5
The American Negro at Paris
  • Among the exhibits at the Paris Universal
    Exposition of 1900 was one on The American
    Negro.
  • At its heart, a collection of five hundred
    photographs arranged and displayed by W.E.B. Du
    Bois, a professor at Atlanta University, an
    African-American college in Georgia.

6
Pictures at the Exposition
7
Paris Fair Owners of the only Black-owned Cotton
Mill
8
Paris Fair Calculus Class
9
Paris Fair Black-Owned Pharmacy
10
Paris Fair African American Band
11
Paris Fair Unpaved Street
12
Paris Fair African American workers at various
machines
13
An Exceptional Youth
  • Up from Poverty in Massachusetts
  • Respect and racism in a small town

14
Education Fisk, Harvard, and Germany
  • Du Bois discovers a Southern African American
    world
  • Consider how miraculous it all was to a boy of
    seventeen, just escaped from a narrow valley. I
    willed and lo! My people came dancing about
    me,--riotous in color, gay in laughter, full of
    sympathy, need and pleading.
  • We were going to have these enslaved Israelites
    out of the still enduring bondage in short
    order.

15
Education Fisk, Harvard, and Germany
  • Only the 6th African American admitted to
    Harvard. (Graduates cum laude in 1890, goes on to
    be the first African American to earn a Ph.D from
    Harvard.)

16
An Academic Career
  • History and the new Social Sciences
  • The promise of salvation would lie in the social
    sciences, not the Bible
  • Studying the the Negro Problem
  • The Philadelphia Negro (1899)
  • Atlanta University Studies
  • Honoring achievement under adversity

17
Booker T. Washington
  • Atlanta Compromise Speech, 1895
  • In all things that are purely social we can be
    as separate as the fingers, yet one as the hand
    in all things essential to mutual progress.

18
Du Bois Comments on Washington and the Atlanta
Compromise
  • Mr. Washington's cult has gained unquestioning
    followersyet the time is come when one may speak
    in all sincerity and utter courtesy of the
    mistakes and shortcomings of Mr. Washington's
    career.
  • Mr. Washington distinctly asks that black people
    give up, at least for the present, three things,
    -- First, political power,
  • Second, insistence on civil rights,
  • Third, higher education of Negro youth, --
  • and concentrate all their energies on industrial
    education, and accumulation of wealth, and the
    conciliation of the South.

19
Political Power and Civil Rights Race and The
American South
  • Losing the Right to Vote
  • Segregation and Exclusion
  • Culture of Racial Violence
  • In 1900, the year of Du Boiss exhibit in Paris,
    there were 115 lynchings in the United States.
    The victims in all but nine of the lynchings were
    African American.

20
Atlanta Riot 1906
21
Du Bois and the Talented Tenth
  • We shall hardly induce black men to believe that
    if their stomachs be full, it matters little
    about their brains. They already dimly perceive
    that the paths of peace winding between honest
    toil and dignified manhood call for the guidance
    of skilled thinkers, the loving, reverent
    comradeship between the black lowly and the black
    men emancipated by training and culture.

22
Du Bois on Double Consciousness
  • The Negro is a sort of seventh son, born with a
    veil, and gifted with second-sight in this
    American world, -- a world which yields him no
    true self-consciousness, but only lets him see
    himself through the revelation of the other
    world. It is a peculiar sensation, this
    double-consciousness, this sense of always
    looking at one's self through the eyes of others,
    of measuring one's soul by the tape of a world
    that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One
    ever feels his twoness, -- an American, a Negro
    two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled
    strivings two warring ideals .

23
Academia and Activism
  • Dealing with Booker T. Washingtons Machine
  • The Niagara Movement, 1905
  • National Association for the Advancement of
    Colored People (NAACP), founded 1909
  • Editor of The Crisis, 1910-1934

24
The Global Context
  • Racism and the Misuse of Evolution
  • Racism in a World of Empires
  • Du Bois looks to Africa

25
Du Bois and Africa
  • Growing awareness of African American connections
    to Africa
  • Criticism of imperialism
  • 1915, from African Roots of WarThere are
    those who would write world-history and leave out
    this most marvelous of continents. Particularly
    to-day most men assume that Africa lies far
    afield from the center of our burning social
    problems, and especially from our present problem
    of World War.
  • Diplomatic mission to Liberia, 1924

26
Pan-Africanism
  • Delegates at a Pan African Congress, Belgium 1921
  • Du Bois was a leader at this and other
    international gatherings to build solidarity with
    and among the peoples of Africa.

27
The Rest of the Story
  • Du Bois as editor of The Crisis, 1910-1934
  • Prolific author Poetry, fiction, history,
    autobiography
  • 1935 Publishes Black Reconstruction, pioneering
    study of the post-Civil War American South
  • Turns toward Marxism, breaks with the NAACP
  • Indicted but not convicted during the McCarthy
    era
  • 1961 Moves to newly-independent Ghana
  • Dies at age 95 in 1963, the day before the giant
    civil rights March on Washington

28
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