Constructing a Black Curriculum reframes how we understand Black Americans’ intellectual and political engagement with education during the first half of the twentieth century. It traces the powerful, diffuse movement created by Black Americans to build what Nocera calls a “Black Curriculum:" a communal effort to represent Black identity, guide racial consciousness, and rebut claims of inferiority. This curriculum first developed as a public educational project in Black learned societies and during the Harlem Renaissance before making its way into schools. The struggle for a Black curriculum was not only a fight against white supremacy, but also an internal debate among Black advocates over the very nature of how race should be represented and taught. This book illuminates this struggle through the work of Black intellectuals (Alexander Crummell, Carter G. Woodson, Hubert Harrison, and Alain Locke) and the intellectual contributions of African American educators (Nannie Burroughs, Jane Dabney Shackelford, and Julia Davis). This essential history provides vital context for contemporary debates over curriculum reform, racial knowledge, and the enduring quest for educational equity.
Note on Terminology
List of AbbreviationsÂ
Introduction: The Intellectual Legacy of a Black Curriculum for Black Consciousness     Â
Chapter 1: The Building Blocks of the Black Curriculum: Black Learned Societies and Racial Uplift at the Turn of the Century                Â
Chapter 2: “More than Equivalent to a Year of College”: Hubert Harrison and the Black Curriculum in Harlem’s New Negro Movement              Â
Chapter 3: Carter G. Woodson: The Black Curriculum Goes to SchoolÂ
Chapter 4: Interwar Cultural Education and the Black Curriculum: The Case of Rachel Davis DuBois and Alain Locke                  Â
Chapter 5: African American Teachers and the Pedagogy of the Black Curriculum
Conclusion: The Afterlife of the Black Curriculum
AcknowledgmentsÂ
Notes
Bibliography  Â
Index
Amato Nocera is an assistant professor of educational equity in the department of Teacher Education and Learning Sciences at North Carolina State University. This is his first book.
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