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    • Racist dismantling of African-Americans' civil rights

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      • Stony the Road — which takes its name from a line in "Lift Every Voice and Sing," often called "the Negro national anthem" — seeks to explain how the racist dismantling of African-Americans' civil rights came about and how it influenced the way people of color experience the country today.
      www.npr.org/2019/04/03/709462439/in-stony-the-road-henry-louis-gates-jr-looks-at-the-period-after-reconstruction
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  2. Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow is a 2019 work of nonfiction focusing on Black history, from Reconstruction to segregation.

  3. Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow is a 2019 non-fiction book written by Henry Louis Gates Jr. covering African-American history during the Reconstruction era, Redemption era, and the New Negro Movement.

  4. In Stony the Road, Henry Gates Jr. presents a linear historical narrative taking place between the Reconstruction Era (1861-1873) and the Harlem Renaissance.

  5. Apr 18, 2019 · Henry Louis Gates Jr.’s “Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow,” an indispensable guide to the making of our times, addresses 2017’s mystifications.

  6. Apr 3, 2019 · Stony the Road — which takes its name from a line in "Lift Every Voice and Sing," often called "the Negro national anthem" — seeks to explain how the racist dismantling of...

  7. In this piercing, haunting study, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., chronicles an American tragedy, the story of how white supremacy and Jim Crow became the South’s—and white America’s—brutal answer to Emancipation and Reconstruction.

  8. Apr 3, 2019 · Stony the Road — which takes its name from a line in "Lift Every Voice and Sing," often called "the Negro national anthem" — seeks to explain how the racist dismantling of...

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