226:, the experience of slavery and its impact on American society and culture. The center of his argument was that without a knowledge of the African-American experience one could not understand what is usually called American history, but rather what colleagues said could be a code for "white American history". With careful scholarship and empathy, his 1977 book
31:
202:
as a professor of history in 1970. Ten years later, Huggins accepted positions as the first W. E. B. Du Bois
Professor of History and Afro-American Studies and Director of the Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research at Harvard University. He also taught outside the U.S. at the
264:
In 1981, Huggins established the W. E. B. Du Bois
Lectureship in Afro-American Life, History and Culture. Harvard students praised Huggins for "exceptional clarity and entertaining lectures" in a course he and a colleague taught on changing concepts of race in the United States.
138:, on January 14, 1927. His father was Winston J. Huggins, an African-American waiter and railroad worker, and his mother was Marie Warsaw, a Jewish woman. When Huggins was 12 years old, his father left the family and his mother moved them to
142:. Marie Warsaw died two years later, leaving 14-year-old Nathan and his sister on their own. Huggins attended high school and worked as a warehouseman, longshoreman, and porter. Near the end of
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Huggins studied the history of
African Americans as an integral part of the history of the United States. His research interests included the history of
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Biography of Nathan Irvin
Huggins, Harvard University Archives, Papers of Nathan I. Huggins: an inventory HUGFP 91.xx (on line).
586:
384:
Writings: The
Suppression of the African Slave-Trade, The Souls of Black Folk, Dusk of Dawn, essays, articles from The Crisis,
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and of North
American slavery, both on the enslaved and on those who enslaved them. Likewise, his study of the
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tells the story of the self-creation of the
African-American people. It traces the full impact of the
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146:, he was drafted and completed high school in the army. Huggins later used the
494:"Huggins, Nathan Irvin, 1927- Papers of Nathan I. Huggins : An inventory"
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171:
431:, December 7, 1989, Late Edition – Final, Section D, p. 22, Column 5.
399:
ed. Brenda Smith
Huggins. New York: Oxford University Press (1995).
166:, receiving his A.B. degree in 1954 and M.A. in 1955. He studied at
425:"'Nathan I. Huggins, Educator, 62; Leader in Afro-American Studies"
346:. New York: Pantheon (1977; reissued with new introduction, 1990).
452:. United States of America: Oxford University Press. p. 132.
207:, the John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies of the
311:
Daniel M. Fox. New York, Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich 2 vols.
106:, author and educator. As a leading scholar in the field of
275:
Protestants
Against Poverty: Boston's Charities, 1870–1900
99:(January 14, 1927 – December 5, 1989) was a distinguished
370:
Afro-American Studies: A Report to the Ford Foundation.
238:
is a lens to examine American society in the Jazz Age.
344:
Black Odyssey: The African-American Ordeal in Slavery
114:
Professor of History and of Afro-American Studies at
194:. He served as visiting associate professor at the
281:by Oscar Handlin). Westport, CT: Greenwood (1971).
86:
78:
59:
37:
21:
357:Slave and Citizen: The Life of Frederick Douglass.
170:, where he received his A.M. in 1957 and Ph.D. in
122:for Afro-American Research. He died of cancer in
473:"Black Americans of Achievement Set, 20-Volumes"
249:He was working on a major biography of the late
397:Revelations: American History, American Myths,
8:
552:Academic staff of Grenoble Alpes University
386:ed. Nathan I. Huggins. Penguin USA (1986).
305:Key issues in the Afro-American experience.
333:New York: Oxford University Press (1976).
259:Civil Rights Movement in the United States
29:
18:
617:University of California, Berkeley alumni
562:Academic staff of the University of Paris
294:New York: Oxford University Press, 1971.
182:Huggins held assistant professorships at
241:Huggins wrote an important biography of
557:Academic staff of Heidelberg University
416:
184:California State University, Long Beach
537:20th-century African-American writers
7:
196:University of California at Berkeley
164:University of California at Berkeley
582:Berkeley Student Cooperative alumni
450:African American National Biography
331:Voices From the Harlem Renaissance.
245:and edited the biographical series
547:20th-century American male writers
372:New York: Ford Foundation (1985).
192:University of Massachusetts Boston
152:University of California, Berkeley
14:
577:American male non-fiction writers
542:20th-century American historians
257:and on a shorter book about the
612:Historians of the United States
607:Historians of African Americans
247:Black Americans of Achievement.
359:Boston: Little, Brown (1980).
198:before joining the faculty at
90:Historian, author and educator
16:American historian (1927–1989)
1:
572:African-American male writers
475:, Chelsea House Publishers.
307:Edited by Nathan I. Huggins,
592:Columbia University faculty
567:African-American historians
118:as well as director of the
633:
602:Harvard University faculty
446:Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham
120:W. E. B. Du Bois Institute
597:Harvard University alumni
209:Free University of Berlin
140:San Francisco, California
28:
205:University of Heidelberg
124:Cambridge, Massachusetts
108:African American studies
71:Cambridge, Massachusetts
162:Huggins studied at the
587:Black studies scholars
442:Gates, Henry Louis Jr.
213:University of Grenoble
423:Narvaez, Alfonso A.,
190:(Illinois), and the
134:Huggins was born in
97:Nathan Irvin Huggins
292:Harlem Renaissance.
200:Columbia University
188:Lake Forest College
479:2007-09-27 at the
429:The New York Times
382:W. E. B. Du Bois,
253:-winning diplomat
243:Frederick Douglass
236:Harlem Renaissance
168:Harvard University
116:Harvard University
459:978-0-19-999044-3
148:GI Bill of Rights
136:Chicago, Illinois
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52:Chicago, Illinois
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496:. Archived from
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112:W. E. B. Du Bois
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63:December 5, 1989
48:January 14, 1927
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500:on May 14, 2007
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232:Middle Passage
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67:(aged 62)
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144:World War II
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65:(1989-12-05)
532:1989 deaths
527:1927 births
504:January 28,
251:Nobel Prize
126:, aged 62.
79:Nationality
521:Categories
411:References
319:(vol. 1).
130:Early life
44:1927-01-14
174:in 1962.
158:Education
110:, he was
104:historian
477:Archived
327:(vol. 2)
279:Foreword
217:Sorbonne
215:and the
101:American
82:American
224:slavery
172:history
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211:, the
269:Works
506:2007
454:ISBN
401:ISBN
388:ISBN
374:ISBN
361:ISBN
348:ISBN
335:ISBN
321:ISBN
313:ISBN
296:ISBN
283:ISBN
73:, US
60:Died
54:, US
38:Born
523::
444:;
427:,
219:.
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508:.
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277:(
46:)
42:(
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