2 Books Published by Omohundro Institute and University of North Carolina Press on AALBC — Book Cover Collage

Click for more detail about White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812 by Winthrop D. Jordan White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812

by Winthrop D. Jordan
Omohundro Institute and University of North Carolina Press (Feb 06, 2012)
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In 1968, historian Winthrop D. Jordan produced a comprehensive examination of how white Englishmen and Anglo-Americans historically viewed blacks. This seminal work outlined how these perceptions laid the foundation for race-based slavery, as well as unequal liberty and justice for whites. The second edition of this landmark text comes with new forewords by historians Christopher Leslie Brown and Peter H. Wood, affirming its lasting significance.

Jordan’s work remains the authoritative text on the history of racial perspectives in America during the colonial period. Subsequent books on slavery and racism are compared to his work, as it serves as the standard by which all other works on the subject are judged. To date, none have been able to surpass the insights and depth of analysis provided in Jordan’s groundbreaking study.


Click for more detail about Negro in the American Revolution (Revised) by Benjamin Quarles Negro in the American Revolution (Revised)

by Benjamin Quarles
Omohundro Institute and University of North Carolina Press (Nov 25, 1996)
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Originally published in 1961, this classic work remains the most comprehensive history of the many and important roles played by African Americans during the American Revolution. With this book, Benjamin Quarles added a new dimension to the military history of the Revolution and addressed for the first time the diplomatic repercussions created by the British evacuation of African Americans at the close of the war. The compelling narrative brings the Revolution to life by portraying those tumultuous years as experienced by Americans at all levels of society.

In an introduction, Gary B. Nash traces the evolution of scholarship on African Americans in the American Revolution from its early roots with William C. Nell to this groundbreaking study. Quarles’s work not only reshaped our thinking about the black revolutionary experience but also invigorated the study of black history as we know it today.

Thad W. Tate, in a foreword, pays tribute to the importance of this work and explains its continuing relevance.