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  1. In the United States, Americans of African Descent have held many identity labels: African, Colored, Negro, Afro-American, Black, and African-American. In the 1960s, there was a shift from the use of "Negro" to the use of "black" as a group identifier.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MoorsMoors - Wikipedia

    The term Moor is an exonym first used by Christian Europeans to designate the Muslim populations of the Maghreb, al-Andalus ( Iberian Peninsula ), Sicily and Malta during the Middle Ages. [1] Moors are not a single, distinct or self-defined people. [2] The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica observed that the term had "no real ethnological value." [3] Europeans of the Middle Ages and the early ...

  3. Aug 6, 2015 · Regardless of whether the term “ Jim Crow ” existed before Rice took it to the stage, his act helped popularize it as a derogatory term for African Americans. To call someone “ Jim Crow ” wasn’t just to point out his or her skin color: It was to reduce that person to the kind of caricature that Rice performed on stage.

  4. Mar 1, 1998 · In addition, the greatest economic gains for African Americans since the early 1960s were in the years 1965 to 1975 and occurred mainly in the South, as economists John J. Donahue III and James ...

  5. Jul 10, 2020 · The histories of slavery and racism in the United States have never been more pertinent. This is also the case for the comparatively understudied history of race as a concept, without which it is ...

  6. Jun 3, 2021 · While the term “Asian American” emerged as part of a revolutionary social movement, today it is a racial category that advocates use to seek change and build political power. But it can also ...

  7. May 3, 2016 · The Gambia River, running from the Atlantic into Africa, was a key waterway for the slave trade; at its height, about one out of every six West African enslaved people came from this area. In ...

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