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African American Studies

Nat Turner, A Troublesome Property

DVD, 60 min.,  2002

This video combines documentary footage and interviews with dramatization of different interpretations of Nat Turner's slave rebellion and its impact on the history of racial conflicts in America.

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EXHIBITS
Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement II

Miles of Smiles: Years of Struggle

DVD, 60 min., 1983, Study guide available

Bringing to light a little-known chapter in American civil rights and labor history, this film tells the story of black pullman porters. Working for tips, the porters provided elegant personal service to overnight railroad passengers for 100 years after the Civil War. Rebuked by white organized labor, they miraculously formed the first black American trade union in 1925 under the leadership of A. Phillip Randolph.

Persistence of the Spirit.

VHS, 32 min., 1986, Study guide available

For the first time, the life and accomplishments, the struggle and hard labor of black Arkansans from territorial days to the present are documented with rare photographs, maps, illustrations, newspapers, and lively scholarly interpretation. The story is organized into five chronological time periods: Black Pioneers Before 1803, No Share in the Harvest: 1803-1860, First Freedom: 1860-1900, Tell 'Em We're Risin': 1900-1954, and We Speak for Ourselves: 1954-1986.

See also:
EXHIBITS
Persistence of the Spirit 

A Profile of Four Black Women: Look Upon Them and Be Renewed

VHS, 40 min., 1981 Study guide available

Patricia McGraw brings to life the personalities and stories of four notable black women: Phillis Wheatley reveals her talent in composing neoclassical poetry in colonial America; Harriet Tubman speaks movingly about slavery, freedom and the Underground Railroad; Sojourner Truth displays her fearless commitment to the abolitionist and feminist causes; Rosa Parks describes the mixture of humiliation and triumph in her heart as she sits on a Montgomery bus in 1955. 

Road to Brown

DVD, 47 min., 1990

The story of segregation and the brilliant legal assault on it which launched the Civil Rights movement. It is also a moving and long-overdue tribute to a visionary but little known black lawyer, Charles Hamilton Houston, "the man who killed Jim Crow." Moving from slavery to civil rights, The Road to Brown provides a concise history of how African Americans finally won full legal equality under the Constitution. 

Road to Las Vegas

VHS, 45 min., 1984

This study of migration from Fordyce, Arkansas, and Tallulah, Louisiana, to Las Vegas, Nevada, as early as the 1920's invites some interesting speculation on bonding and white/black relations in these southern towns. Backed by research of Little Rock black studies specialist Ruth Patterson, the film is an in-depth look into a little-known story. 
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