From "Superman" to ManA classic work of fiction from the Harlem Renaissance Joel Augustus Roger's seminal work, this novel first published in 1917 is a polemic against the ignorance that fuels racism. The central plot revolves around a debate between a Pullman porter and a white racist Southern politician. |
From inside the book
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Page 21
... tion , as have the self - styled superior peoples of today for the less developed ones . But these undeveloped peoples should not be despised . Nature , it certainly appears , does not intend to have the whole world civilized at the ...
... tion , as have the self - styled superior peoples of today for the less developed ones . But these undeveloped peoples should not be despised . Nature , it certainly appears , does not intend to have the whole world civilized at the ...
Page 56
... tion car , entered the room . Handing a telegram to Dixon , he asked him to send it at the next stop . When the passenger was gone the senator again brought up the same subject and Dixon read him the following from Finot : " It is ...
... tion car , entered the room . Handing a telegram to Dixon , he asked him to send it at the next stop . When the passenger was gone the senator again brought up the same subject and Dixon read him the following from Finot : " It is ...
Page 71
... tion - this question of a pigmented or unpigmented skin , with or without straight hair , and the supposed significance of these to real manhood , in short , whether one's physical appearance is not a more reliable index to his mental ...
... tion - this question of a pigmented or unpigmented skin , with or without straight hair , and the supposed significance of these to real manhood , in short , whether one's physical appearance is not a more reliable index to his mental ...
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Common terms and phrases
Africa American Anglo-Saxon asked average white beauty believe better black and white blood Booker cannibalism Caucasian centuries Chicago Christianity citizens civilization colored women Communists cultured darker races Dixon continued Dixon found Dixon took Europe European feeling Finot hair Haiti Harry Johnston Havelock Ellis human variety hundred immorality Indian Ira Aldridge Jews jim-crow large number laws less live look lynching marriage marry matter mental miscegenation morality mulatto nation native Negro Negro women never nigger Northern notebook number of whites odor opinion party passenger porter primitive prove question racial rape replied Dixon segregation self-respect sexual skin slavery slaves smoker so-called social equality South South America Southern speak spirit superior syphilis tell thing thought tion train trait truth United Universal Races Congress white American white man's white persons white race white women woman Zulu