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  1. William Edward Burghardt (W.E.B.) Du Bois czyt. [d ʊ ˈ b o ɪ z] (ur. 23 lutego 1868 w Great Barrington w stanie Massachusetts, zm. 27 sierpnia 1963 w Akrze) – amerykański pisarz, socjolog, krytyk, intelektualista, działacz społeczny i socjalistyczny.

  2. right over human conflict.11 Du Bois continued to advocate world peace, along with his other principles of civil rights for Black Americans and Third World liberation. But unlike the ma-jority of white Americans, Du Bois' detailed understanding of peace was a dialectical and dynamic concept, rooted in the mate-

  3. 11 sie 2009 · In B. Bell, E. Grosholz & J. B. Stewart (Eds.), W. E. B. Du Bois on race and culture (pp. 141–160). NY: Routledge. NY: Routledge. Google Scholar

  4. Published six years before The Souls of Black Folk, W.E.B. Du Bois’ “The Conservation of Races” is a key to grasping its author’s highly particular stance on late 19 th-century black nationalism. For Du Bois takes a middle road between pure integrationism, aimed at obtaining full civil rights for blacks, and pure separatism, guided by ...

  5. 23 lis 2011 · W. E. B. Du Bois, who would go on to help found the NAACP and serve as a forefather of the civil-rights movement, was first introduced to a national audience in 1897, when The Atlantic...

  6. 10 paź 2024 · Under the leadership of Du Bois, James Weldon Johnson, Walter White, Thurgood Marshall, and others, the NAACP publicized racial injustices and initiated lawsuits to secure equal treatment for Black Americans in education, employment, housing, and public accommodations.

  7. Du Bois left the NAACP in 1934, as his call for blacks’ separate development undercut its interracialism. He returned to research, teaching, and civil and human rights struggles. The government prosecuted him unsuccessfully as a Communist Party agent in 1951 but revoked his passport until 1959.