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AFAM 162: African American History: From Emancipation to the Present

Lecture 04 - Reconstruction (continued). After the massive cultural shift that the South endured under Reconstruction, white Southerners were determined to fight back. In this lecture, Professor Holloway discusses the complicated meaning of Redemption as white Southerners rose up, reclaimed, and redeemed that which they thought was theirs. During this era, African Americans experienced extreme forms of violence as whites guaranteed the return of power, including the resurgence of the KKK, as well as gerrymandering and poll taxes to ensure the elimination of blacks as a voting class. In the second half of the lecture, Professor Holloway focuses on the ideas of civilization and manliness, lynchings, and anti-lynching campaigns. Fears of rape and ideas of white womanhood frequently served as the justification for the systematic psychological and economic terrorism of African Americans during the "Rise of Redemption." (from oyc.yale.edu)

Lecture 04 - Reconstruction (continued)

Time Lecture Chapters
[00:00:00] 1. Billie Holliday Song: "Strange Fruit"
[00:03:35] 2. From Reconstruction to the Rise of Redemption
[00:08:47] 3. Forces Used to Eliminate the Black Vote
[00:22:07] 4. Lynching: The Ultimate form of Racial Harassment
[00:40:04] 5. Images of Lynching

References
Lecture 4 - Reconstruction (continued)
Instructor: Professor Jonathan Holloway. Credit List [PDF]. Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov].

Go to the Course Home or watch other lectures:

Lecture 01 - Dawn of Freedom
Lecture 02 - Dawn of Freedom (continued)
Lecture 03 - Reconstruction
Lecture 04 - Reconstruction (continued)
Lecture 05 - Uplift, Accommodation, and Assimilation
Lecture 06 - Uplift, Accommodation, and Assimilation (continued)
Lecture 07 - Migration and Urbanization
Lecture 08 - Migration and Urbanization (continued)
Lecture 09 - The New Negroes
Lecture 10 - The New Negroes (continued)
Lecture 11 - Depression and Double V
Lecture 12 - Depression and Double V (continued)
Lecture 13 - The Road to Brown and Little Rock
Lecture 14 - From Sit-Ins to Civil Rights
Lecture 15 - From Sit-Ins to Civil Rights (continued)
Lecture 16 - From Voting Rights to Watts
Lecture 17 - From Voting Rights to Watts (continued)
Lecture 18 - Black Power
Lecture 19 - Black Power (continued)
Lecture 20 - The Politics of Gender and Culture
Lecture 21 - The Politics of Gender and Culture (continued)
Lecture 22 - Public Policy and Presidential Politics
Lecture 23 - Public Policy and Presidential Politics (continued)
Lecture 24 - Who Speaks for the Race?
Lecture 25 - Who Speaks for the Race? (continued)