Coverart for item
The Resource How it feels to be free : black women entertainers and the civil rights movement, Ruth Feldstein

How it feels to be free : black women entertainers and the civil rights movement, Ruth Feldstein

Label
How it feels to be free : black women entertainers and the civil rights movement
Title
How it feels to be free
Title remainder
black women entertainers and the civil rights movement
Statement of responsibility
Ruth Feldstein
Creator
Author
Subject
Genre
Language
eng
Cataloging source
DLC
http://library.link/vocab/creatorDate
1965-
http://library.link/vocab/creatorName
Feldstein, Ruth
Dewey number
323.1196/073
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
LC call number
E185.86
LC item number
.F4342 2013
Literary form
non fiction
Nature of contents
bibliography
http://library.link/vocab/subjectName
  • African American women political activists
  • African American women entertainers
  • Performing arts
  • African Americans
  • African Americans
  • United States
Label
How it feels to be free : black women entertainers and the civil rights movement, Ruth Feldstein
Instantiates
Publication
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (page 197-272) and index
Carrier category
volume
Carrier category code
  • nc
Carrier MARC source
rdacarrier
Content category
text
Content type code
  • txt
Content type MARC source
rdacontent
Contents
Introduction: performing civil rights -- "The world was on fire": making New York City subcultures -- "Africa's musical ambassador": Miriam Makeba and the "voice of Africa" in the United States -- "More than just a jazz performer": Nina Simone's border crossings -- "No one asks me what I want": Abbey Lincoln, Diahann Carroll, and the promise of integration in popular culture -- "So beautiful in those rags": Cicely Tyson, Popular culture, and African American history in the 1970s -- Epilogue
Dimensions
24 cm
Extent
296 pages
Isbn
9780195314038
Lccn
2013019878
Media category
unmediated
Media MARC source
rdamedia
Media type code
  • n
Other physical details
illustrations
System control number
17855217
Label
How it feels to be free : black women entertainers and the civil rights movement, Ruth Feldstein
Publication
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (page 197-272) and index
Carrier category
volume
Carrier category code
  • nc
Carrier MARC source
rdacarrier
Content category
text
Content type code
  • txt
Content type MARC source
rdacontent
Contents
Introduction: performing civil rights -- "The world was on fire": making New York City subcultures -- "Africa's musical ambassador": Miriam Makeba and the "voice of Africa" in the United States -- "More than just a jazz performer": Nina Simone's border crossings -- "No one asks me what I want": Abbey Lincoln, Diahann Carroll, and the promise of integration in popular culture -- "So beautiful in those rags": Cicely Tyson, Popular culture, and African American history in the 1970s -- Epilogue
Dimensions
24 cm
Extent
296 pages
Isbn
9780195314038
Lccn
2013019878
Media category
unmediated
Media MARC source
rdamedia
Media type code
  • n
Other physical details
illustrations
System control number
17855217

Library Locations

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      33.831775 -117.919638