W.E.B. du bois's sociology : the philadelphia negro and social science
By: ZUBERI, Tukufu.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Thousand Oaks : SAGE, September 2004The Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science 595, p. 146-156Abstract: The authors addresses how, as a scholar, W.E.B. Du Bois transcended disciplinary boundaries and genre by providing answers to questions of racial colonialism and enslavement, the role of theory in social change, and the role of race in the dehumanization of the African, to name only a few. Here, the author offers a critical review of Du Bois's application of sociology to hte study of the African diaspora in America in The Philadelphia Negro A Social Study. The article gives an overview of Du Bois's sociological research as historical, statistical, demographic, and cultural in nature - the type of research that, Du Bois demanded, must lead to social actionThe authors addresses how, as a scholar, W.E.B. Du Bois transcended disciplinary boundaries and genre by providing answers to questions of racial colonialism and enslavement, the role of theory in social change, and the role of race in the dehumanization of the African, to name only a few. Here, the author offers a critical review of Du Bois's application of sociology to hte study of the African diaspora in America in The Philadelphia Negro A Social Study. The article gives an overview of Du Bois's sociological research as historical, statistical, demographic, and cultural in nature - the type of research that, Du Bois demanded, must lead to social action
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