A Social History of the American Negro


Read by Jim Locke

(4.6 stars; 4 reviews)

A comprehensive history of what experiences and influences created the Negro American citizen as we find him at the beginning of the twentieth century. - Summary by Jim Locke (14 hr 30 min)

Chapters

Chapter 1, Part 1 22:17 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 1, Part 2 24:45 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 2, Part 1 28:07 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 2, Part 2 29:05 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 3, Part 1 24:41 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 3, Part 2 37:24 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 4 33:01 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 5, Part 1 25:58 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 5, Part 2 31:24 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 6 35:02 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 7 43:11 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 8 39:15 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 9, Part 1 36:55 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 9, Part 2 34:24 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 9, Part 3 25:52 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 10, Part 1 34:24 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 10, Part 2 22:23 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 11 31:47 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 12 21:29 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 13, Part 1 23:57 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 13, Part 2 28:41 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 14 21:15 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 15, Part 1 33:45 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 15, Part 2 32:02 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 15, Part 3 35:46 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 16, Part 1 35:48 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 16, Part 2 37:59 Read by Jim Locke
Chapter 17 40:09 Read by Jim Locke

Reviews

Really raycyst


(5 stars)

It uses the N word in the title. Negros have been eliminated and replaced with BIPOCs. Also HISTORY is incredibly marginalizing of nonbinary gay peoples. Perhaps if this work were retitled "A communal herstory of BIPOCs in the land stolen from indigenous citizens by Christopher Columbus", I would bother listening.