Race relations in the United States

Articles on Race relations in the United States from The Crisis (1910-1934)

Race relations in the United States (7 articles)

Articles on Race relations in the United States from The Crisis (1910-1934)

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Date Title Description
1914 (Jun) William Monroe Trotter W.E.B. Du Bois in The Crisis (1914) praises William Monroe Trotter’s fearless defense of Black equality and criticizes Wilson’s paternalistic race views.
1920 (Mar) Unrest W.E.B. Du Bois in The Crisis (1920) invokes divine intervention in a poem of social unrest, pleading for clarity amid racial and political turmoil.
1921 (Jan) Amity In 1921 The Crisis, W.E.B. Du Bois argues interracial amity and frank dialogue will heal race injustice and strengthen American democracy.
1921 (Feb) The Lynching Bill In The Crisis (1921), W.E.B. Du Bois condemns lynching as wholesale murder, urging federal action to defend law, democracy, and Black lives.
1921 (Mar) About Pugilists In 1921 W.E.B. Du Bois in The Crisis exposes racial hypocrisy in boxing—condemning outrage at Jack Johnson while lynching goes unprotested.
1929 (Feb) The National Interracial Conference In 1929 W.E.B. Du Bois in The Crisis calls for coordinated interracial study and annual conferences to address race, education, health, labor, and suffrage.
1934 (May) Violence W.E.B. Du Bois in The Crisis (1934) warns that violence, given U.S. demographics, would provoke white backlash, justify repression, and imperil Black democracy.
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