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  1. 6:30 AM. Tuesday, April 9, 2024. Multimedia celebration of the legacy of Paul Robeson, including the presentation of the Robeson Clay Project. 5:30-7:00 PM (Free) Details. Saturday, April 13, 2024. Robeson Day – starting at the Arts Council of Princeton (Free) 10:15 AM: Introduction and announcement of 2024 Robeson Scholars & Fellows.

  2. 12 de ene. de 2016 · Paul Robeson is one of the greatest yet most unknown figures of the 20th century. This article goes beyond the traditional bibliographic style of documenting this great life, toward constructing a usable philosophical framework from it. Utilizing Robeson’s own works, and building on the small critical literature already in existence, I ...

  3. Paul Robeson’s mother, Maria Louisa Bustill Robeson (1853–1904), a descendant of free Blacks. Maria married William Robeson in 1878. They had seven children, the youngest of whom was Paul Leroy Robeson, born in 1898. Maria was a former teacher of black children. Nearly blind from cataracts, she died from burns received in a kitchen fire in ...

  4. Paul Robeson: A Life of Activism and Art is the biography of an African American icon and a demonstration of historian Lindsey R. Swindall's knack for thorough, detailed research and reflection. Paul Robeson was, at points in his life, an actor, singer, football player, political activist and writer, one of the most diversely talented members of the Harlem Renaissance.

  5. Placing Paul Robeson in History: ... JBS XXX10.1177/0021934715623533Journal of Black StudiesRhodes research-article2016 ... Using primary and secondary sources from P. Robeson’s time and

  6. 16 de feb. de 2024 · Paul Robeson at the Paris World Peace Congress, April 1949. Box 53, Communist Party of Great Britain photograph collection, People’s History Museum. Image reproduced courtesy of the People’s ...

  7. 9 de abr. de 2020 · As a matter of fact, no student in the first Afro-American Studies course at Rutgers in fall 1970 had ever heard of Robeson. Professor Weaver, the new, founding Head of Africana Studies at the time, worked with many others to restore Robeson’s name to its rightful place in world history.