The Negro by W.E.B. Du Bois
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W.E.B. Du Bois >> The Negro
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Such figures and facts give some slight idea of the economic meaning of
the Negro to-day as a worker and industrial factor. "Tropical Africa and
its peoples are being brought more irrevocably every year into the vortex
of the economic influences that sway the western world."[113]
What do Negroes themselves think of these their problems and the attitude
of the world toward them? First and most significant, they are thinking.
There is as yet no great single centralizing of thought or unification of
opinion, but there are centers which are growing larger and larger and
touching edges. The most significant centers of this new thinking are,
perhaps naturally, outside Africa and in America: in the United States and
in the West Indies; this is followed by South Africa and West Africa and
then, more vaguely, by South America, with faint beginnings in East
Central Africa, Nigeria, and the Sudan.
The Pan-African movement when it comes will not, however, be merely a
narrow racial propaganda. Already the more far-seeing Negroes sense the
coming unities: a unity of the working classes everywhere, a unity of the
colored races, a new unity of men. The proposed economic solution of the
Negro problem in Africa and America has turned the thoughts of Negroes
toward a realization of the fact that the modern white laborer of Europe
and America has the key to the serfdom of black folk, in his support of
militarism and colonial expansion. He is beginning to say to these
workingmen that, so long as black laborers are slaves, white laborers
cannot be free. Already there are signs in South Africa and the United
States of the beginning of understanding between the two classes.
In a conscious sense of unity among colored races there is to-day only a
growing interest. There is slowly arising not only a curiously strong
brotherhood of Negro blood throughout the world, but the common cause of
the darker races against the intolerable assumptions and insults of
Europeans has already found expression. Most men in this world are
colored. A belief in humanity means a belief in colored men. The future
world will, in all reasonable probability, be what colored men make it. In
order for this colored world to come into its heritage, must the earth
again be drenched in the blood of fighting, snarling human beasts, or will
Reason and Good Will prevail? That such may be true, the character of the
Negro race is the best and greatest hope; for in its normal condition it
is at once the strongest and gentlest of the races of men: "Semper novi
quid ex Africa!"
FOOTNOTES:
[110] Sir Harry Johnston estimates 135,000,000 Negroes, of whom 24,591,000
live in America. See _Inter-Racial Problems_, p. 335.
[111] The South African natives, in an appeal to the English Parliament,
show in an astonishing way the confiscation of their land by the English.
They say that in the Union of South Africa 1,250,000 whites own
264,000,000 acres of land, while the 4,500,000 natives have only
21,000,000 acres. On top of this the Union Parliament has passed a law
making even the future purchase of land by Negroes illegal save in
restricted areas!
[112] The traveler Glave writes in the _Century Magazine_ (LIII, 913):
"Formerly [in the Congo Free State] an ordinary white man was merely
called 'bwana' or 'Mzunga'; now the merest insect of a pale face earns the
title of 'bwana Mkubwa' [big master]."
[113] E.D. Morel, in the _Nineteenth Century_.
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING
There is no general history of the Negro race. Perhaps Sir Harry H.
Johnston, in his various works on Africa, has come as near covering the
subject as any one writer, but his valuable books have puzzling
inconsistencies and inaccuracies. Keane's _Africa_ is a helpful
compendium, despite the fact that whenever Keane discovers intelligence in
an African he immediately discovers that its possessor is no "Negro." The
articles in the latest edition of the _Encyclopaedia Britannica_ are of
some value, except the ridiculous article on the "Negro" by T.A. Joyce.
Frobenius' newly published _Voice of Africa_ is broad-minded and
informing, and Brown's _Story of Africa and its Explorers_ brings together
much material in readable form. The compendiums by Keltie and White, and
Johnston's _Opening up of Africa_ are the best among the shorter
treatises.
None of these authors write from the point of view of the Negro as a man,
or with anything but incidental acknowledgment of the existence or value
of his history. We may, however, set down certain books under the various
subjects which the chapters have treated. These books will consist of (1)
standard works for wider reading and (2) special works on which the author
has relied for his statements or which amplify his point of view. _The
latter are starred_.
THE PHYSIOGRAPHY OF AFRICA
A.S. White: _The Development of Africa_, 2d ed., 1892.
Stanford's Compendium of Geography: _Africa_, by A.H. Keane, 2d ed.,
1904-7.
E. Reclus: _Universal Geography_, Vols. X-XIII.
RACIAL DIFFERENCES AND THE ORIGIN AND CHARACTERISTICS OF NEGROES
J. Deniker: _The Races of Man_, etc., New York, 1904.
*J. Finot: _Race Prejudice_ (tr. by Wade-Evans), New York, 1907.
*W.Z. Ripley: _The Races of Europe_, etc., New York, 1899.
*Jacques Loeb: in _The Crisis_, Vol. VIII, p. 84, Vol. IX, p. 92.
*_Papers on Inter-Racial Problems Communicated to the First Universal
Races Congress_, etc. (ed. by G. Spiller), 1911.
*G. Sergi: _The Mediterranean Race_, etc., London, 1901.
*Franz Boas: _The Mind of Primitive Man_, New York, 1911.
C.B. Davenport: _Heredity of Skin Color in Negro-White Crosses_, 1913.
EARLY MOVEMENTS OF THE NEGRO RACE
*Sir Harry H. Johnston: _The Opening up of Africa_ (Home University
Library).
---- _A History of the Colonization of Africa by Alien Races_, Cambridge,
1905.
*G.W. Stowe: _The Native Races of South Africa_ (ed. by G.M. Theal),
London, 1910.
(Consult also Johnston's other works on Africa, and his article in Vol.
XLIII of the _Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great
Britain and Ireland_; also _Inter-Racial Problems, and_ Deniker, noted
above.)
NEGRO IN ETHIOPIA AND EGYPT
(The works of Breasted and Petrie, Maspero, Budge and Newberry and
Garstang are the standard books on Egypt. They mention the Negro, but
incidentally and often slightingly.)
*A.F. Chamberlain: "The Contribution of the Negro to Human Civilization"
(_Journal of Race Development_, Vol. I, April, 1911).
T.E.S. Scholes: _Glimpses of the Ages_, etc., London, 1905.
W.H. Ferris: _The African Abroad_, etc., 2 vols., New Haven, 1913.
E.A.W. Budge: _The Egyptian Sudan_, 2 vols., 1907.
*_Archeological Survey of Nubia_.
*A. Thompson and D. Randal McIver: _The Ancient Races of the Thebaid_,
1905.
ABYSSINIA
Job Ludolphus: _A New History of Ethiopia_ (tr. by Gent), London, 1682.
W.S. Harris: _Highlands of AEthiopia_, 3 vols., London, 1844.
R.S. Whiteway: _The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia_ ... as narrated by
Castanhosa, etc., 1902.
THE NIGER RIVER AND ISLAM *F.L. Shaw (Lady Lugard): _A Tropical
Dependency_, etc., London, 1906.
(The reader may dismiss as worthless Lady Lugard's definition of "Negro."
Otherwise her book is excellent.)
*Es-Sa'di, Abderrahman Ben Abdallah, etc., translated into French by O.
Houdas, Paris, 1900.
*F. DuBois: _Timbuktu the Mysterious_ (tr. by White), 1896.
*W.D. Cooley: _The Negroland of the Arabs_, etc., 1841.
*H. Barth: _Travels and Discoveries in North and Central Africa_, etc., 5
vols., 1857-58.
*Ibn Batuta: _Travels_, etc. (tr. by Lee), 1829.
*Leo Africanus: _The History and Description of Africa_, etc. (tr. by
Pory, ed. by R. Brown), 3 vols., 1896.
*E.W. Blyden: _Christianity, Islam, and the Negro Race_.
*Leo Frobenius: _The Voice of Africa_ (tr. by Blind), 2 vols., 1913.
Mungo Park: _Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa_, 1799.
THE NEGRO ON THE GUINEA COAST
*Leo Frobenius (as above).
Sir Harry H. Johnston: _Liberia_, 2 vols., New York, 1906.
H.H. Foote: _Africa and the American Flag_, New York, 1859.
T.H.T. McPherson: _A History of Liberia_, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins
Studies.
T.J. Alldridge: _A Transformed Colony_ (Sierra Leone), London, 1910.
E.D. Morel: _Affairs of West Africa_, 1902.
H.L. Roth: _Great Benin and Its Customs_, 1903.
*F. Starr: _Liberia_, 1913.
W. Jay: _An Inquiry_, etc., 1835.
*A.B. Ellis: _The Tshi-speaking Peoples of the Gold Coast_, 1887.
---- _The Ewe-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_, 1890.
---- _The Yoruba-speaking Peoples of the Slave Coast_, 1894.
C.H. Read and O.M. Dalton: _Antiquities from the City of Benin_, etc.,
1899.
*M.H. Kingsley: _West African Studies_, 2d. ed., 1904.
*G.W. Ellis: _Negro Culture in West Africa_ (Vai-speaking peoples), 1914.
THE CONGO VALLEY
*G. Schweinfurth: _The Heart of Africa_, Vol. II, 1873.
*H.M. Stanley: _Through the Dark Continent_, 2 vols., 1878.
---- _In Darkest Africa_, 2 vols., 1890.
---- _The Congo_, etc., 2 vols., London, 1885.
H. von Wissman: _My Second Journey through Equatorial Africa_, 1891.
*H.R. Fox-Bourne: _Civilization in Congoland_, 1903.
Sir Harry H. Johnston: _George Grenfell and the Congo_, 2 vols., London,
1908.
*E.D. Morel: _Red Rubber_, London, 1906.
THE NEGRO IN THE REGION OF THE GREAT LAKES
*Sir Harry H. Johnston: _The Uganda Protectorate_, 2d ed., 2 vols., 1904.
---- _British Central Africa_, 1897.
---- _The Nile Quest_, 1903.
*D. Randal McIver: _Mediaeval Rhodesia_, 1906.
*_The Last Journals of David Livingstone in Central Africa_ (ed. by H.
Waller), 1874.
J. Dos Santos: _Ethiopia Oriental_ (Theal's _Records of South Africa_,
Vol. VII).
C. Peters: "Ophir and Punt in South Africa" (_African Society Journal_,
Vol. I).
De Barros: _De Asia_.
R. Burton: _Lake Regions of Central Africa_, 1860.
R.P. Ashe: _Chronicles of Uganda_, 1894.
(See also Stanley's works, as above.)
THE NEGRO IN SOUTH AFRICA
*G.M. Theal: _History and Ethnography of South Africa of the Zambesi to
1795_, 3 vols., 1907-10.
---- _History of South Africa since September, 1795_, 5 vols., 1908.
---- _Records of South Eastern Africa_, 9 vols., 1898-1903.
*J. Bryce: _Impressions of South Africa_, 1897.
D. Livingstone: _Missionary Travels in South Africa_, 1857.
*South African Native Affairs Commission, 1903-5, _Reports_, etc., 5
vols., Cape Town, 1904-5.
G. Lagden: _The Basutos_, London, 1909.
J. Stewart: _Lovedale_, 1884.
(See also Stowe, as above.)
ON NEGRO CIVILIZATION
J. Dowd: _The Negro Races_, 1907, 1914.
*H. Gregoire: _An Inquiry concerning the Intellectual and Moral Faculties
and Literature of Negroes_, etc. (tr. by Warden), Brooklyn, 1810.
C. Buecher: _Industrial Evolution_ (tr. by Wickett), New York, 1904.
*Franz Boas: "The Real Race Problem" (_The Crisis_, December, 1910).
---- _Commencement Address_ (Atlanta University Leaflet, No. 19).
*F. Ratzel: _The History of Mankind_ (tr. by Butler), 3 vols., 1904.
C. Hayford: _Gold Coast Institutions_, 1903.
A.B. Camphor: _Missionary Sketches and Folk Lore from Africa_, 1909.
R.H. Nassau: _Fetishism in West Africa_, 1907.
*William Schneider: _Die Culturfaehigkeit des Negers_, Frankfort, 1885.
*G. Schweinfurth: _Artes Africanae_, etc., 1875.
Duke of Mecklenburg: _From the Congo to the Niger and the Nile_ (English
tr.), Philadelphia, 1914.
D. Crawford: _Thinking Black_.
R.N. Cust: _Sketch of Modern Language of Africa_, 2 vols., 1883.
H. Chatelain: _The Folk Lore of Angola_.
D. Kidd: _The Essential Kaffir_, 1904.
---- _Savage Childhood_, 1906.
---- _Kaffir Socialism and the Dawn of Individualism_, 1908.
M.H. Tongue: _Bushman Paintings_, Oxford, 1909.
(See also the works of A.B. Ellis, Miss Kingsley, Sir Harry H. Johnston,
Frobenius, Stowe, Theal, and Ibn Batuta; and particularly Chamberlain's
article in the _Journal of Race Development_.)
THE SLAVE TRADE
T.K. Ingram: _History of Slavery and Serfdom_, London, 1895. (Same article
revised in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th edition.)
John R. Spears: The American Slave Trade, 1900.
*T.F. Buxton: _The African Slave Trade and Its Remedy_, etc., 1896.
T. Clarkson: _History ... of the Abolition of the African Slave Trade_,
etc., 2 vols., 1808.
R. Drake: _Revelations of a Slave Smuggler_, New York, 1860.
*_Report of the Lords of the Committee of Council_, etc., London, 1789.
*B. Mayer: _Captain Canot or Twenty Years of an African Slaver_, etc.,
1854.
W.E.B. DuBois: _The suppression of the African Slave-Trade to the U.S.A._,
1896.
(See also Bryan Edwards' _West Indies_.)
THE WEST INDIES AND SOUTH AMERICA
Fletcher and Kidder: _Brazil and the Brazilians_, 1879.
*Bryan Edwards: _History ... of the British West Indies_, 5 editions,
Vols. II-V, 1793-1819.
*Sir Harry H. Johnston: _The Negro in the New World_, 1910.
T.G. Steward: _The Haitian Revolution_, 1791-1804, 1914.
J.N. Leger: _Haiti_, etc., 1907.
J. Bryce: _South America_, etc., 1912.
*J.B. de Lacerda: "The Metis or Half-Breeds of Brazil" (_Inter-Racial
Problems_, etc.)
A.K. Fiske: _History of the West Indies_, 1899.
THE NEGRO IN THE UNITED STATES
*_Walker's Appeal_, 1829.
*G.W. Williams: _History of the Negro Race in America_, 1619-1880, 1882.
B.G. Brawley: _A Short History of the American Negro_, 1913.
B.T. Washington: _Up from Slavery_, 1901.
---- _The Story of the Negro_, 2 vols., 1909.
*_The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man_, 1912.
*G.E. Stroud: _Sketch of the Laws relating to Slavery_, etc., 1827.
_The Human Way_: Addresses on Race Problems at the Southern Sociological
Congress, Atlanta, 1913 (ed. by J.E. McCulloch).
W.J. Simmons: _Men of Mark_, 1887.
*J.R. Giddings: _The Exiles of Florida_, 1858.
W.E. Nell: _The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution_, etc., 1855.
C.W. Chesnutt: _The Marrow of Tradition_, 1901.
P.L. Dunbar: _Lyrics of Lowly Life_, 1896.
*_Life and Times of Frederick Douglass_, revised edition, 1892.
*H.E. Kreihbel: _Afro-American Folk Songs_, etc., 1914.
T.P. Fenner and others: _Cabin and Plantation Songs_, 3d ed., 1901.
W.F. Allen and others: _Slave Songs of the United States_, 1867.
W.E.B. DuBois: "The Negro Race in the United States of America"
(_Inter-Racial Problems_, etc.).
---- "The Economics of Negro Emancipation" (_Sociological Review_,
October, 1911).
---- _John Brown_.
---- _The Philadelphia Negro_, 1899.
W.E.B. DuBois: "Reconstruction and its Benefits" (_American Historical
Review_, Vol. XV, No. 4).
---- _editor_, The Crisis: A Record of the Darker Races, monthly, 1910.
---- _editor_, The Atlanta University Studies:
No. 1. _Mortality Among Negroes in Cities_, 1896.
No. 2. _Social and Physical Conditions of Negroes in Cities_, 1897.
No. 3. _Some Efforts of Negroes for Social Betterment_, 1898.
No. 4. _The Negro in Business_, 1899.
No. 5. _The College Bred Negro_, 1900.
No. 6. _The Negro Common School_, 1901.
No. 7. _The Negro Artisan_, 1902.
No. 8. _The Negro Church_, 1903.
No. 9. _Notes on Negro Crime_, 1904.
No. 10. _A Select Bibliography of the Negro American_, 1905.
No. 11. _Health and Physique of the Negro American_, 1906.
No. 12. _Economic Co-operation among Negro Americans_, 1907.
No. 13. _The Negro American Family_, 1908.
No. 14. _Efforts for Social Betterment among Negro Americans_, 1909.
No. 15. _The College Bred Negro American_, 1910.
No. 16. _The Common School and the Negro American_, 1911.
No. 17. _The Negro American Artisan_, 1912.
No. 18. _Morals and Manners among Negro Americans_, 1913.
*G.W. Cable: _The Silent South_, etc., 1885.
*J.R. Lynch: _The Facts of Reconstruction_, 1913.
*J.T. Wilson: _The Black Phalanx_, 1897.
William Goodell: _Slavery and Anti-Slavery_, 1852.
G.S. Merriam: _The Negro and the Nation_, 1906.
A.B. Hart: _The Southern South_, 1910.
*G. Livermore: _An Historical Research respecting the Opinions of the
Founders of the Republic on Negroes_, etc., 1862.
Hartshorn and Penniman: _An Era of Progress and Promise_, 1910 (profusely
illustrated).
*James Brewster: _Sketches of Southern Mystery, Treason, and Murder_.
Willcox and DuBois: _Negroes in the United States_ (United States Census
of 1900, Bulletin No. 8).
THE FUTURE OF THE NEGRO RACE
*J.S. Keltie: _The Partition of Africa_, 2d ed., 1895.
B.T. Washington: _The Future of the Negro_.
W.E.B. DuBois: "The Future of the Negro Race in America" (_East and West_,
Vol. II, No. 5).
---- _Souls of Black Folk_, 1913.
---- _Quest of the Silver Fleece_.
Alexander Crummell: _The Future of Africa_, 2d ed., 1862.
*Casely Hayford: _Ethiopia Unbound_, 1911.
Kelly Miller: _Out of the House of Bondage_, 1914.
---- _Race Adjustment_, 1908.
*J. Royce: _Race Questions_, etc., 1908.
*R.S. Baker: _Following the Color Line_, 1908.
N.S. Shaler: _The Neighbor_.
E.D. Morel: "Free Labor in Tropical Africa" (_Nineteenth Century and
After_, 1914).
(See also Finot, Boas, _Inter-Racial Problems_, and White's _Development
of Africa_.)
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