The National Museum of African American History and Culture was established in 2003 as the 19th museum of the Smithsonian Institution, the largest museum complex and research organization in the world. Its mission is to provide for the collection, study, and establishment of programs and exhibitions relating to African American life, art, history, and culture.
BOOKLIST
History will be made and embraced when the National Museum of
African American History and Culture, a long-in-the-works and
crucial addition to the Smithsonian Institution, opens on the
National Mall in Washington, D.C., in September 2016. This richly
researched, clarion, and visually exciting volume introduces the
museum’s encompassing approach to the depth and complexity of the
African American experience. With 275 color illustrations and
essays brief and extended by two dozen scholars and curators, this
welcoming overview covers a broad spectrum of subjects from
slavery, emancipation, and desegregation to African Americans in
the military, African American churches and educational
institutions, the black press, “black meccas,” black entrepreneurs,
and African American artists and athletes. As valuable as the
cultural perspectives are, the numerous portraits of individuals
stand out, such as enslaved Bridget “Biddy” Mason, who successfully
sued for her freedom and became a millionaire, and once-enslaved
Robert Smalls, who became a Civil War Hero and a five-term U.S.
congressman. "Helping the public discover a meaningful past” in
order “to understand the present” is the museum’s mission, and it
is splendidly launched by this magnetic, many-faceted book.
-Donna Seaman
KIRKUS
A literary companion to the Smithsonian's soon-to-open National
Museum of African American History and Culture. Jumping from
history to culture in an earnest attempt to be inclusive, this
lavishly illustrated work by the museum's staff and editor Conwill
highlights the museum's collection, which has been steadily
gathered since 2005 and will open to the public in September 2016
in its imposing new space on the Washington Mall. The contributors
to this excellent resource are stellar—e.g., "sage adviser" John
Hope Franklin (now deceased)—and they move beyond the stereotypes
embedded in scholarship throughout the eras to bring a fresh sense
of how African-Americans contribu ted mightily to the overall
"great American dream" and changed it for the better. The
enslavement of Africans and their importation to the New World in
the 17th century mark the beginning of this tortuous journey, and
the editors take readers up to the Civil War in handsome layouts
featuring photographs of the collection, such as items owned by
slaves and short bios of notable figures like abolitionist
publisher William Lloyd Garrison and crusader Sojourner Truth.
Eloquent poems help break up the brisk historical tone, and the
superb scholarship continues in chapters dealing with
Reconstruction and black migration, as well as "Making a Way Out of
No Way," which concerns the building of institutions that allowed
African-Americans to get educated (e.g., Howard University,
Tuskegee Institute) and succeed in life (churches, businesses,
newspapers). Interim chapters on military participation and
sporting heroes (male and female) make an awkward juxtaposition
against the chronolog y, while the last chapter on "African
American Influence on American Culture" is dazzling. Some of the
contributors include Yale historian David Blight, museum
supervisory curator Elaine Nichols, renowned scholar Peniel Joseph,
and author Tonya Bolden, among others. An enticing guide to the
museum's extensive exhibits.
LIBRARY JOURNAL
To celebrate and commemorate the September 2016 opening of the most
recent Smithsonian Institution museum, the National Museum of
African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) in Washington, DC,
commissioned this collection of 27 essays. Adopting as a title the
opening lines of a Langston Hughes poem, editor Kinshasha Holman
Conwill (deputy director, NMAAHC) divides the work into chapters
that span slavery to emancipation, Jim Crow and the civil rights
movement, and African American influence and presence in American
culture. Together, the 24 contributors provide expert chronological
and thematic explorations of both the centrality of the African
American experience to U.S. evolution as well as its diversity.
Recurrent ideas grapple with African American travails and triumphs
and advance what NMAAHC founding director Lonnie G. Bunch III in
his introduction describes as the museum’s mission—to introduce new
audiences to the African American past while also prodding public
memory to confront America’s racial history, its pains, and its
prospects. VERDICT With the feel of an exhibition catalog rich with
illustrations, this handsome work provides both a sweeping
historical overview of African American history and a tantalizing
glimpse of the artifacts, images, and stories NMAAHC promises to
display from among its treasures.—Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State
Univ., Tempe
WASHINGTON INFORMER
I loved this book, and I think you will, too. If you enjoy history
or if you’re planning a visit to our Nation’s capital, Dream a
World Anew is a souvenir you’ll want to keep.
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