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Twentieth Century Negro Literature or A Cyclopedia of Thought on the Vital Topics Relating to the American Negro - Daniel Wallace CULP

The object of this book is... (1) To enlighten the uninformed white people on the intellectual ability of the Negro. (2) To give to those, who are interested in the Negro race, a better idea of the extent to which he contributed to the promotion of America's civilization, and of the intellectual attainments made by him in the nineteenth century. (3) To reflect the views of the most scholarly and prominent Negroes of America on those topics, touching the Negro, that are now engaging the attention of the civilized world. (4) To point out, to the aspiring Negro youth, those men and women of their own race who, by their scholarship, by their integrity of character, and by their earnest efforts in the work of uplifting their own race, have made themselves illustrious; also, to enlighten such youth on those ethical, political, and sociological questions, touching the Negro that will sooner or later engage their attention. (5) To enlighten the Negroes on that perplexing problem, commonly called the "Race Problem," that has necessarily grown out of their contact with their ex-masters and their descendants; and also to stimulate them to make greater efforts to ascend to that plane of civilization occupied by the other enlightened peoples of the world. (From the Preface)

This book examines the following topics:

1. Did the American Negro make, in the nineteenth century, achievements along the lines of wealth, morality, education, etc., commensurate with his opportunities? If so, what achievements did he make?
2. Will it be possible for the Negro to attain, in this country, unto the American type of civilization?
3. How can the friendly relations now existing between the two races in the South be strengthened and maintained?
4. Should the Negro be given an education different from that given to the white?
5. Should the ignorant and non-property holding Negro be allowed to vote?
6. Is the criminal Negro justly dealt with in the courts of the South?
7. To what extent is the Negro pulpit uplifting the race?
8. Is it time for the Negro colleges in the South to be put into the hands of Negro teachers?
9. Will the education of the Negro solve the race problem?
10. What role is the educated Negro woman to play in the uplifting of her race?
11. How can the Negroes be induced to rally more to Negro business enterprises and to their professional men?
12. What are the causes of the great mortality among the Negroes in the cities of the South and how is that mortality to be lessened?
13. What should be the Negro's attitude in politics?
14. Is the Negro as morally depraved as he is reputed to be?
15. Is the young Negro an improvement morally on his father?
16. The Negro as a writer
17. Did the American Negro prove, in the nineteenth century, that he is intellectually equal to the white man?
18. What progress did the American white man make in the nineteenth century along the line of conceding to the Negro his religious, political and civil rights?
19. The Negro as a laborer
20. The Negro as a Christian
21. Does the North afford to the Negro better opportunities of making a living than the South?
22. What is the Negro teacher doing in the matter of uplifting his race?
23. Is the Negro newspaper an important factor in the elevation of the Negro?
24. Are other than Baptist and Methodist Churches adapted to the present Negro?
25. The Negro as a business man
26. The Negro as a farmer
27. The Negro as an inventor
28. What the omen?
29. Why the Negro race survives
30. The signs of a brighter future for the American Negro
31. Negro criminality
32. The American Negro's opportunities in Africa
33. The Negro and education
34. A Negro in it
35. The Negro's adversities help him
36. The American Negro and his possibilities
37. Important lessons from the awful tragedy
38. How to help the Negro to help himself
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Dedication, Preface, IntroductionTopic 1, First Paper, by Mary B. TalbertTopic 1, Second Paper, by Josephine Silone YatesTopic 1, Third Paper, by Rev. J. W. E. BowenTopic 1, Fourth Paper, by Rev. M. C. B. MasonTopic 1, Fifth Paper, by Rev. D. Webster DavisTopic 2, First Paper, by Bishop H. M. TurnerTopic 2, Second Paper, by Bishop L. H. HolseyTopic 2, Third Paper, by R. S. LovinggoodTopic 2, Fourth Paper, by Bishop J. W. HoodTopic 3, First Paper, by Hon. H. P. CheathamTopic 3, Second Paper, by Rev. W. D. ChappelleTopic 3, Third Paper, by Rev. S. N. BrownTopic 4, First Paper, by James W. JohnsonTopic 4, Second Paper, by Prof. James StorumTopic 4, Third Paper, by Rev. S. G. AtkinsTopic 4, Fourth Paper, by Prof. J. H. JonesTopic 5, by John P. GreenTopic 6, First Paper, by Attorney R. S. SmithTopic 6, Second Paper, by Attorney I. L. PurcellTopic 6, Third Paper, by George T. RobinsonTopic 6, Fourth Paper, by Attorney J. Thomas HewinTopic 7, First Paper, by Bishop George Wylie ClintonTopic 7, Second Paper, by Rev. J. B. L. WilliamsTopic 7, Third Paper, by Rev. R. P. WycheTopic 7, Fourth Paper, by Rev. I. D. DavisTopic 8, First Paper, by Prof. N. B. YoungTopic 8, Second Paper, by Prof. D. J. JordanTopic 8, Third Paper, by George A. GoodwinTopic 8, Fourth Paper, by Mrs. Paul L. DunbarTopic 9, First Paper, by Booker T. WashingtonTopic 9, Second Paper, by Prof. J. R. HawkinsTopic 9, Third Paper, by Prof. Kelley MillerTopic 9, Fourth Paper, by C. H. TurnerTopic 10, First Paper, by Mrs. R. D. SpragueTopic 10, Second Paper, by Mrs. Mary Church TerrellTopic 10, Third Paper, by Mrs. Rosa D. BowserTopic 10, Fourth Paper, by Mrs. C. C. PetteyTopic 11, First Paper, by Rev. H. T. JohnsonTopic 11, Second Paper, by Prof. J. W. GilbertTopic 11, Third Paper, by J. R. PorterTopic 12, First Paper, by Mrs. Warren LoganTopic 12, Second Paper, by Hon. H. A. RuckerTopic 12, Third Paper, by Dr. John R. FrancisTopic 12, Fourth Paper, by James Randall WilderTopic 12, Fifth Paper, by Dr. R. F. BoydTopic 12, Sixth Paper, by Henry R. ButlerTopic 13, First Paper, by Hon. George H. WhiteTopic 13, Second Paper, by T. T. FortuneTopic 13, Third Paper, by Hon. George W. MurrayTopic 14, First Paper, by Prof. B. H. PetersonTopic 14, Second Paper, by Prof. A. U. FriersonTopic 14, Third Paper, by Mrs. M. E. C. SmithTopic 15, First Paper, by Edward MacKnight BrawleyTopic 15, Second Paper, by Rev. J. S. FlipperTopic 15, Third Paper, by Rev. E. C. MorrisTopic 15, Fourth Paper, by Mrs. Ariel S. BowenTopic 16, First Paper, by Rev. J. Q. JohnsonTopic 16, Second Paper, by Walter I. LewisTopic 16, Third Paper, by G. M. McClellanTopic 17, by M. W. GilbertTopic 18, First Paper, by John W. CromwellTopic 18, Second Paper, by Rev. J. M CoxTopic 19, First Paper, by N. W. HarlleeTopic 19, Second Paper, by Prof. R. G. RobinsonTopic 19, Third Paper, by Miss Lena T. JacksonTopic 20, First Paper, by Rev. William E. ParteeTopic 20, Second Paper, by Rev. L. B. EllersonTopic 20, Third Paper, by Rev. Walter H. BrooksTopic 20, Fourth Paper, by Rev. H. H. ProctorTopic 20, Fifth Paper, by Rev. S. KerrTopic 21, First Paper, by Rev. J. H. AndersonTopic 21, Second Paper, by Prof. W. H. CouncillTopic 22, First Paper, by Prof. A. St. George RichardsonTopic 22, Second Paper, by Prof. E. L. BlackshearTopic 22, Third Paper, by T. W. TalleyTopic 22, Fourth Paper, by Prof. H. L. WalkerTopic 23, First Paper, by Dr. D. W. OnleyTopic 23, Second Paper, by Walter N. WallaceTopic 23, Third Paper, by Richard W. ThompsonTopic 24, First Paper, by Rev. George F. Bragg, Jr.Topic 24, Second Paper, by Rev. John W. WhittakerTopic 24, Third Paper, by Rev. O. M. WallerTopic 25, First Paper, by T. W. JonesTopic 25, Second Paper, by Andrew F. HilyerTopic 25, Third Paper, by Rev. J. H. MorganTopic 26, First Paper, by Prof. George W. CarverTopic 26, Second Paper, by H. A. HuntTopic 27, by H. E. BakerTopic 28, by Prof. W. S. ScarboroughTopic 29, by T. de S. TuckerTopic 30, by Rev. F. J. GrimkeTopic 31, by John Henry SmythTopic 32, by William H. HeardTopic 33, by Mrs. Lena MasonTopic 34, by Mrs. Lena MasonTopic 35, by Prof. Joseph D. BibbTopic 36, by George L. KnoxTopic 37, by E. E. CooperTopic 38, by W. R. Pettiford
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