HBR's 10 must reads on AI, analytics, and the new Machine Age

HBR's 10 must reads on AI, analytics, and the new Machine Age Slave narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1938 - Boston Harvard Business Review Press 2019 - 181 p. 21 cm.

Title from home page as viewed on May 9, 2001. Offered as part of the American Memory online resource compiled by the National Digital Library Program of the Library of Congress.

An introduction to the WPA slave narratives / by Norman R. Yetman -- Voices and faces from the collection -- About the collection -- Related resources -- A note on the language of the narratives.

Presents more than 2,300 first-person accounts of slavery and 500 black-and-white photographs of former slaves. Provides links from individual photographs to the corresponding narratives. Collected in the 1930s as part of the Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), the narratives were assembled and microfilmed in 1941 as the seventeen-volume work entitled Slave narratives: a folk history of slavery in the United States, from interviews with former slaves.


Mode of access: World Wide Web.

9781633696846

2001561576


Slaves--United States--Interviews.
Slaves--United States--Pictorial works.
Slaves--Social conditions--United States--Sources.
Freedmen--United States--Interviews.
African Americans--Interviews.


United States--Biography.

E444

658.4038

Powered by Koha