MORE THAN FIVE CENTURIES OF THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
K-12 Schools & Districts
Public Libraries
Universities & Colleges
About This Product
Covering more than 500 years of the African-American experience, African-American History offers a fresh way to explore the full spectrum of African-American history and culture. Users can start their investigation of a topic with a video or slideshow overview, use the key content called out on the home page to find an entryway into the database, or dig deep into a subject or era through the Topic Centers. Read about key figures and events, examine famous speeches and other primary sources, and get context from the in-depth timelines. An important feature is the full cross-searchability across all the Infobase history databases for an even more comprehensive view of history.
For a limited time, we are offering easy, instant access to African-American History and our other cross-searchable history databases. GO TO THE OPEN TRIAL
Comprehensive Coverage: With African-American History, users can delve deep into their topics or examine different perspectives through event and topic entries, slideshows, primary sources, images, tablet/mobile-friendly videos, general and topic-specific timelines, biographies of key people, original maps and charts, and more.
Easy Access to Content: Featured content in African-American History is handpicked by our editors to inform research and provide guided entryways into the database, plus convenient links to key areas are at the top of every page.
Editorially Curated Topic Centers: African-American History features specially selected content—including articles, sharable slideshows, videos, primary sources, and more—that provides a study guide for a particular subject or era.
Subjects covered include:
Abolitionist Movement
Underground Railroad
Emancipation Proclamation
Great Black Migrations
Jim Crow Era
Harlem Renaissance
Civil Rights Act of 1964
African Americans and Politics
Black Contributions to America
Landmark Court Cases
African-American Heritage
Black Women in American History
Eras covered include:
Africa, Colonization, and the Slave Trade: Beginnings–1819
Compromise and Conflict over Slavery: 1820–1860
The Civil War and Reconstruction: 1861–1876
Segregation, Migration and the Beginnings of Protest: 1877–1928
The Great Depression and the New Deal: 1929–1940
World War II and the Start of Desegregation: 1941–1954
Civil Rights Protest and Progress: 1955–1971
Expansion of Opportunities: 1972–Present.
Suggested Research Topics: Each Topic Center in African-American History includes handpicked selections showcasing the best resources for each topic—including in-depth overview essays—and providing guidance for research.
Primary Sources:African-American History includes hundreds of primary sources, many with introductions that provide context and background.
Videos, Images, Maps, and Slideshows:African-American History’s videos and original slideshows provide a fascinating visual introduction to key topics and themes.
Biographies: Under “Featured People,” African-American History includes helpful lists of civil rights activists, trailblazing military figures, abolition leaders, Harlem Renaissance figures, major musicians, leading scientists, and influential writers. Each list includes dates of birth and death, a brief descriptor of the person’s achievements, and a link to relevant search results.
Controversies in History: Editorially selected pro/con articles on many high-interest controversies can be found in African-American History, enabling researchers to grasp the essence and importance of every conflict and the reasons Americans debated them.
Overview Essays:African-American History includes substantial and thorough overview essays giving extensive background on relevant historical topics and eras.
Book Chapters: Chapters from authoritative print titles written by noted historians complement the thousands of encyclopedia entries, biographies, definitions, and other resources African-American History provides. Book Chapters allow for original thinking and are ideal for an in-depth study of a topic.
Authoritative Source List:African-American History features a complete inventory, by type, of the extraordinary amount of expertly researched and written content in the database, including articles from a wealth of award-winning proprietary and distinguished print titles, primary sources, images, videos, timelines, and a list of contributors to the database—information researchers can trust.
Curriculum Tools: This section of African-American Historyfeatures writing and research tips for students and educators, including:
Advice on analyzing and understanding editorial cartoons, primary sources, and online sources
Guides for presenting research, including avoiding plagiarism, citing sources, completing a primary source worksheet, summarizing articles, and writing research papers
Educator tools, including advice on preventing plagiarism and using editorial cartoons in class.
Full Cross-Searchability:African-American History is fully cross-searchable with any combination of the other Infobase History Research Center databases to which your institution subscribes.
Search by Common Core, national, state, provincial, International Baccalaureate Organization, C3 Framework for Social Studies, and College Board AP standards to find correlating articles
Convenient A-to-Z topic lists
Tag “clouds” for all content, linking to related material
Searchable timelines, including a detailed general timeline, updated monthly, plus subject-specific and era-specific timelines
“National History Day” feature, with suggested searches in accordance with the theme of the NHD competition
Maps and graphs with descriptions
Real-time, searchable Reuters® newsfeed
Dynamic citations in MLA, Chicago, APA, and Harvard formats, with EasyBib and NoodleTools export functionality
Read Aloud tool
Ability for users to set preferences for default language, citation format, number of search results, and standards set for correlations
Persistent record links
Search Assist technology
Searchable Support Center with valuable help materials, how-to tips, tutorials, and live help chat
Selected Infobase databases now feature an “Export to NoodleTools” option for citation information. This new feature can be found via the Citation pop-up window on any page users wish to cite. The databases that now have NoodleTools include: American History African American History American Ind…read more →
Covering more than 500 years of the African-American experience, African-American History offers a fresh way to explore the full spectrum of African-American history and culture—but don’t just take our word for it! Check out the overview video below! Our brand-new overview video gives you…read more →
Google Sign-In can now be turned on to allow users to sign into the African-American History database with their Google credentials, enabling one-click log-in access using the “Sign in with Google” button. This option is turned off by default and can be activated by account administrators in the…read more →
Six new subject Topic Centers have just been added to our African-American History database, offering specially selected content on milestone events and subjects throughout African-American history and complementing the Topic Centers on historical eras. These new, more focused Topic Centers cover…read more →
We are delighted to announce our latest update to our five Infobase history databases (History Research Center)—valuable new entries, articles, and videos. More Than 3,300 New and Updated Entries and More Than 770 New Videos (9,500+ Clips) History Research Center now features a wealth of new cont…read more →
With the abundance of electronic resources available today, many schools prefer to access their educational assets in one place. Federated search engines and other discovery tools allow libraries to do just that—easily search through multiple content sources in their catalog at the same time. The …read more →
Infobase’s latest update to its African-American History database adds approximately 300 new primary source documents, providing insight and firsthand looks into historical topics from the past several hundred years—perfect for document-based learning and strengthening critical-thinking skills.…read more →
“…offers an impressive variety of sources and content well designed for browsing or searching…high quality…The interface is clean and easy to navigate…The biggest strength is the curated content…worthy of inclusion at high school, college, and public libraries…Highly recommended.”
Choice
“…authoritative…very useful for students, teachers, and librarians.”
American Reference Books Annual
“…highly recommended…easy to use…extremely student-friendly.”
Booklist
“…easy to navigate and authoritative. Highly recommended.”
Choice
“This is a very thorough online subject encyclopedia…The breadth and coverage make this a definite recommendation for those interested in Black Studies.”
MultiCultural Review
“…pulls together a variety of material and packages it into one attractive resource.”
Booklist
“…ambitiously aims to explore all aspects of the African American experience, from the past to the present…with impressive results. Even obscure topics ignored by other resources are covered here…makes some insightful connections…an excellent resource…highly recommended…”
Library Journal
“…a thorough subject encyclopedia in coverage…the synergy of all the various components…provides students and researchers with a rich web of information.”
Electronic Resources Review
“…a detailed overview…contains a vast amount of information….”