AltaMira Press
Pages: 344
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7591-0199-9 • Hardback • May 2002 • $143.00 • (£110.00)
978-0-7591-0200-2 • Paperback • April 2002 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-1-4616-6681-3 • eBook • April 2002 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Eugene F. Provenzo, Jr. is a professor in the School of Education at the University of Miami. He is the author of a wide range of books on education, history and cultural studies.
Chapter 1 Preface and Acknowledgements
Chapter 2 Introduction
Part 3 One: Du Bois's Experience as a Student and Teacher
Chapter 4 A Negro Schoolmaster in the New South
Chapter 5 A Negro Student at Harvard at the End of the 19th Century
Chapter 6 Two: Du Bois on Education and Social Power
Chapter 7 Of the Training of Black Men
Chapter 8 The Training of Negroes for Social Power
Chapter 9 The Talented Tenth
Part 10 Three: Du Bois on Elementary and Secondary Education
Chapter 11 The Freedman's Bureau
Chapter 12 Heredity and the Public Schools
Chapter 13 Negro Education
Chapter 14 Does the Negro Need Separate Schools?
Chapter 15 How Negroes Have Taken Advantage of Educational Opportunities Officered by Friends
Chapter 16 Two Hundred Years of Segregated Schools
Part 17 Du Bois, Washington and the Hampton Model
Chapter 18 Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others
Chapter 19 Hampton
Chapter 20 Education and Work
Part 21 Five: Du Bois and Higher Education
Chapter 22 Careers Open to College-Bred Negroes
Chapter 23 Atlanta University
Chapter 24 Gifts and Education
Chapter 25 Negroes in College
Chapter 26 The Negro College
Chapter 27 The Future of Wilberforce University
Chapter 28 The Future and Function of the Private Negro College
Part 29 Six: Education and Literature
Chapter 30 The New Education
Chapter 31 Bibliography
The complicated, brilliant DuBois never bores or tires us. . . . Provenzo's assemblage is timely. In the current climate of fundamental educational reconsideration, this work both reinforces what we already understood, and causes us to reflect anew on the greatest black scholar of the last century...The essays chosen for this work deliver an intimate panorama of DuBois' views on education...of interest to both the casual and serious DuBois enthusiast.
— William H. Watkins, professor, University of Illinois at Chicago; Anthropology & Education Quarterly, Dec. '03 (Vol.34,#4)