LC control no. | n 79067618 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Marable, Manning, 1950-2011 |
Variant(s) | Marable, William Manning, 1950-2011 |
Associated country | United States |
Birth date | 1950-05-03 |
Death date | 2011-04-01 |
Place of birth | Dayton (Ohio) |
Place of death | New York (N.Y.) |
Field of activity | Blacks--Study and teaching |
Affiliation | University of Wisconsin--Madison University of Maryland at College Park Fisk University National Black Political Assembly (U.S.) Tuskegee Institute Cornell University |
Profession or occupation | Historians College teachers |
Found in | His Blackwater, essays in Black and Southern history, c1979: t.p. (Manning Marable) CIP data sheet (b. 1950) New York times WWW site, Apr. 5, 2011 (in obituary published Apr. 1: Manning Marable; b. William Manning Marable, May 13, 1950, Dayton, Ohio; d. Friday [Apr. 1, 2011], Manhattan, aged 60; leading scholar of black history and a leftist critic of American social institutions and race relations) African American National Biography, accessed February 25, 2014, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (Marable, Manning; historian, professor; born 03 May 1950 in Dayton, Ohio, United States; graduated from Earlham College (1971); earned a master's degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison (1972); a doctorate in American history from the University of Maryland (1976); was a lecturer on Black Studies at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts (1974-1976); became active in the National Black Political Assembly; joined the New American Movement; was chair of the political science department at Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee, Alabama; an associate professor of Africana Studies at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York; a history and economics professor at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee; director of the Race Relations Institute; worked as a political sociology professor and director of the Minority Studies program at Colgate University in Hamilton, New York; became a professor of history and political science at Columbia University; cofounded the Black Radical Congress, an African American activist coalition, and established the Center for Contemporary Black History at Columbia University; died 01 April 2011 in New York, New York, United States) |