Royce, Josiah, The Race Question and Other American Problems, New
Ruffini, F. G., The Negro as a Political and Social Factor, Richmond, 1888. Scott, Emmett J., The American Negro in the Great War, 1919. Scott, Emmett J., Negro Migration During the War, New York, 1920. Seligmann, Herbert J., The Negro Faces America, New York, 1922. Shaler, N. S., The Neighbor, New York, 1904.
Sinclair, William A., The Aftermath of Slavery, Boston, 1905.
Smith, G. Elliot, "The Influence of Racial Intermixture in Egypt," Eugenics
Smith, W. B., The Color Line, New York, 1906.
Spiller, G., Editor, Proceedings of the Universal Races Congress. Spencer, Herbert, Principles of Sociology, New York, 1883.
Stevenson, G. T. Race Distinctions in American Law, New York, 1910. Stoddard. Lothrop, The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy, New York, 1920.
Stone, Alfred Holt, Studies in the American Race Problem, New York, 1908.
Tannenbaum, Frank, Darker Phases of the South, New York, 1924.
The Negro Problem, (symposium), New York, 1903.
Thomas, William H., The American Negro, New York, 1901.
Thomas, William I., "The Psychology of Race Prejudice," American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 9, p. 593.
Thomas, William I., "Race Psychology," American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 171, p. 725.
Tozzer, Alfred M., Social Origins and Social Continuities, New York, 1925. Twain, Mark (Clemens, Samuel L.), Pudd'nhead Wilson.
Twain, Mark (Clemens, Samuel L.), Tom Sawyer Abroad.
Tylor, Edward B., Anthropology, New York, 1904.
Washington, Booker T., The Future of the American Negro, Boston, 1899. Washington, Booker T., Up From Slavery, New York, 1900.
Washington, Booker T., The Story of the Negro, New York, 1909. Washington, Booker T., Working with the Hands, New York, 1904. Washington, Booker T., Frederick Douglass, New York, 1907. Washington, Booker T., My Larger Education, New York, 1911. Washington, Booker T., Character Building, New York, 1903. Weale, B. L., Putnam (pseud.), The Conflict of Color, New York, 1910. Weatherford, W. D., Negro Life in the South, New York, 1910.
Weatherford, W. D., The Negro from Africa to America, New York,
Weatherford, W. D., Present Forces in Negro Progress, New York, 1912. Westermarck, Edward, History of Human Marriage, New York, 1894. White and Jackson, Anthology of Negro Verse, Durham, N. C., 1924. Whittier, John Greenleaf, The Slave Ships.
Willcox, Walter F., Part Two of Stone, Studies in the American Race
Williams, George W., History of the Negro Race in America, New York, 1882.
Wissler, Clark, Man and Culture, New York, 1923.
Woodson, Carter G., History of the Negro Church, Washington, 1921. Woodson, Carter G., A Century of Negro Migration, Washington, 1918. Woodson, Carter G., The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861, New York, 1915.
Woodson, Carter G., The Negro in Our History, Washington, 1922. Woofter, Thomas J., The Basis of Racial Adjustment, New York, 1925. Woofter, Thomas J., "The Negroes of Athens," University of Georgic Bulletin, Vol. 14, No. 4.
Woofter, Thomas J., Negro Migration Changes in Rural Organization and Population of the Cotton Belt, New York, 1920.
Woofter and Fisher, Coöperation in Southern Communities, Atlanta, 1921. Work, J. W., Folk Songs of the American Negro, Nashville, 1915
Adams, Charles Francis, on the differ- ence between the Negro and Cauca- sian, 385; on the unwisdom of con- ferring equal civil rights upon the Negro, 491
Esthetic Life of the Negro, 307, 325, 335, 347, 349, 350; suggestions as to developing, 590
Esthetic Values, applied to race physiognomy, 362
Affinities. See Racial Affinities. Africa, the Negro in, 3
Agriculture, the Negro in, 86 Aldridge, Frederick, actor, 349 Alexander, Will W., leader in inter- racial coöperation, 558
Allen, James Lane, in reference to the Negro, 289
Altruism, consistent with the social separateness of races, 443 Amalgamation, racial, 362; as a factor
in evolution, 424; extent of, in the United States, 445; sentiment of whites and blacks as to, 453; futility of advocating, 453
Negro in politics, 46; on race preju- dice, 75; on race contact in the North, 39; on Negro traits, 401; on race feeling North and South, 441; on race segregation in the South, 113; contrasting DuBois and Booker Washington, 520; as author, 270 Beecher, Henry Ward, views of, on the mixture of white and black blood, 454
Biological Principles, applied to races, 410-416, 525
Birth-rate of the Negro, 527, 530 Bishoff, on the relation of brain weight to intelligence, 389
Black, idea of, associated with evil, 363
Black Belt, in the South, possible future domination of, by the Negro, 481-485; as favorable to Negro in- crease, 530; in Chicago, 31 Blending of Cultures, consequences of, 424
Blind Tom, Negro musical genius, 346 Blumenbach, on race equality, 365
Angell, James R., on racial differences, Boaz, on race equality, 370 376
Antipathies, racial, as related to sex intercourse, 419, 420. See Racial Affinities and Antipathies. Archer, William, on Negro schools, 68; on Jim Crow laws, 113; on Negro preachers, 181; on the inferiority of the Negro, 384; on race fusion, 455; on the colonization of the Negro, 484; on the Negro's losing favor among whites, 518; on the desire of mulattoes for white society, 570
Baker, Ray Stannard, on the color line in the North, 6, 10, 20, 23; on the
Bonner, Sherwood, authoress depicting Negro character, 291
Brain, size and form of, as indicative of intelligence, 389; of Negro and white compared, 390
Braithwaite, William S., literary works of, 316
Brawley, Benjamin, Negro author quoted, 6; writings of, 326. Bryant, A. T., mental contrast between the Negro and Caucasian, 383- Bryce, James, on race intermixture in the United States, 452; on the inter- marriage of whites and Negroes, 454; on race segregation, 476
Bücher, on the effect of civilization on primitive peoples, 432
Buchner, Ludwig, on the extinction of
backward peoples, 542
Buckle, Thomas, on race equality, 366 Bullard, General, report of, on Negro
troops in France, 224, 226, 227, 232 Burke, Edmund, quoted, 362 Burmeister, on Negro traits, 397-398, 401, 408
Burr, Clinton S., on the colonization of the Negro, 462
Caldwell, Colonel, on the service of Negro troops in France, 235 California, race problem in, 490, 495, 569, 586
Carlyle, on punishment of criminals,
147; on the inferiority of the Negro, 382; on the right of a people to possess territory, 495 Carr-Saunders, on the inferiority of the Negro, 382; on the relation of puberty to mental growth, 393; on Negro traits, 407; on the relative importance of temperament and in- tellect in inheritance, 408; on cross- breeding, 411; on the factor of tradi- tion in progress, 428; on culture con- tact, 436
Carver, T. N., on the effect of contact
of high and low standards, 438, 439.
Chain-gangs. See Negro Convicts. Chamberlain, D. H., on race intermix- ture, 454
Chesnutt, Charles W., novels of, 325;
views of, on the race issue, 507 Chicago, the Negro in, 31; as crime center, 51
Children, Negroes likened to, 401 Civil Equality, as a solution of the race problem, 486-492; difficulty of, under conditions of racial diversity, 488; failure of, where whites and blacks are massed together, 489 Civilization, influence of, on primitive peoples, 431, 527
Civil Justice, in the North, 54; in the South, 137-142
Civil Privileges, of the Negro, in the Northern states, 39, 46, 494; in the Southern states, 103, 110 Class Distinctions, among Negroes, 96, 97, 472
Clay, Henry, on the colonization of the Negro, 459
Clergymen, Southern, on lynching, 559 Climate, influence of, on culture, 6, 11 Cohen, O. R., stories of, relating to the Negro, 302
Coleridge, on the marriage of whites and blacks, 456
Colonization, of the Negro, schemes for, 458; as a solution of the race question, 458-469; aptitude of the Negro for, 466
Colored Free State, as a solution of the race problem, 481-485
Color Line, in Harlem, 30; in Northern
schools, 19, 66-71; in Northern churches, 74, 75; in America and Eu- rope, 566-568; in New York and Georgia contrasted, 568; reasons for a, 568
Commission on Inter-race Coöperation, work of, 555
Competition, of whites and Negroes as affecting the survival of the latter,
541 Conklin, E. G., on race-crossing, 413; on segregation, 471
Conquest, not the chief means of cul- ture diffusion, 428
Consciousness of Kind, as a factor in race-crossing, 364; as a guide to social contacts, 364, 417, 418, 419, 420, 568; as affecting political control, 489, 490, 494, 497
Contact of Races. See Race Contacts. Contacts, between whites and blacks, diminishing, 548
Contrasts, between the Negro and Cau- casian, 593
Cooley, C. H., on faith as a factor in progress, 592
Cooper, James Fenimore, the Negro in works of, 263
Coöperation, need of, between whites and blacks, 554; efforts towards in- terracial, 547-565; need of inter- racial, 566
Corrothers, James D., relating his ex- perience as pastor, 75; on Negro preachers, 79; on race separation in travel, 111; on the Southern white man, 135; poems of, 315, 320; auto- biography of, 331
Cotton gin, as affecting slavery in the South, 12
Cox, Ernest, plea of, for racial integ- rity, 302; favors Negro colonization, 467
Crimes, of the Negro, in the Northern
states, 49-53; in the Southern states, 115-120
Crimes of the whites, against the Negro, in Northern states, 54-65; in Southern states, 128-131. See Lynch- ing, Mobs.
Cromwell, J. W., as author, 333 Cross-breeding, consequences of, 410- 416; function of, 414; as unimportant for progress, 427, 428
Crozier, John B., on culture and race mixture, 436
Cullen, Countee, poetry of, 318 Culture, conditions favoring the de- velopment of, 425; infusion of, the means of progress, 428; possible ren- ascence of, under different conditions, 431, 434; conditions which favor the ripening of, 436; clash of, within the same race and nation, 432-440 Culture Contacts, influence of, upon people of different levels of culture, 430; influence of, within the same race and nation, 432-438; example of injurious, 430, 431, 432, 434, 435 Culture Levels, as determining the value of race mixture, 430
Darwin, on race equality, 372; on cross-breeding, 410
Davenport, C. B., on uneugenic mar- riages, 382
Death-rate, of the Negro, 527, 528, 529 Demagogues, mischief of white, in the North and South due to the Negro vote, 587, 588; cure for, 588 Demolins, on race differences, 373 Dendy, Arthur, on the biological as- pects of race-crossing, 415
De Tocqueville, on religious excesses in America, 180; on the impossibility of civil equality in the South, 487 Dillard, James H., promoter of better Negro schools, 165, 177, and of inter- racial coöperation, 551 Disfranchisement. Civil Equality.
Dixon, Roland B., on racial inequali- ties, 375; on head-form and intelli- gence, 390
Dixon, Thomas, novels of, relating to the Negro, 285
Domestic Life of the Negro in the
North, 24; in the South, 96-102. See Family Life.
Domestic Service. See Negro Serv-
Donations to Negro Education, by white philanthropists, 164-166; by Negro philanthropists, 167 Douglass, Fred, as editor, 351 Dramatic Art, the Negro in, 349 Drummond, Henry, on the acuteness of sense in man and animals, 399 DuBois, W. E. B., on race prejudice, 18; on Negro camp-meetings, 179; as author, 330; criticism of, 377; on Negro traits, 402; view of, on the race question, 506; on the diminish- ing contact of Negroes and whites, 520
Dunbar, Paul Laurence, poetry of, 307, 323; novels of, 325; on the race problem, 510
Dunham, R. L., novel of, relating to the Negro, 302
Dunn, L. C., on race-crossing, 414-
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