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Black & White was a biweekly alternative newspaper covering news and culture in Birmingham, Alabama.It was established in 1992 by Chuck Geiss, who continued to own and publish the paper until it shut down in early 2013.
Newspaper coverage of the movement served to publicize the cause. However, the way in which the movement was portrayed, and those whose struggles were highlighted in the press, displaced Black women to the background of a movement they spearheaded. A woman's issue, and a Black woman's issue, was being covered by the press.
This is a list of African American newspapers and media outlets, which is sortable by publication name, city, state, founding date, and extant vs. defunct status.For more detail on a given newspaper, see the linked entries below.
A newspaper is a periodical publication containing written information about current events and is often typed in black ink with a white or gray background. Newspapers can cover a wide variety of fields such as politics, business, sports, art, and science.
Manly in the 1880s. Alexander Lightfoot Manly (May 13, 1866 – October 5, 1944) was an American newspaper owner and editor who lived in Wilmington, North Carolina. [1] With his brother, Frank G. Manly, as co-owner, he published the Daily Record, the state's only daily African-American newspaper and possibly the nation's only black-owned daily newspaper.
Negro World was [when?] the newspaper of the Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League (UNIA). Founded by Garvey and Amy Ashwood Garvey , the newspaper was published weekly in Harlem , and distributed internationally to the UNIA's chapters in more than forty countries. [ 1 ]
Front-page, 25 January 1895 of Black & White Playbill for "illustrated lecture" on the South African campaign by René Bull, a war correspondent and artist for Black & White. Black & White: A Weekly Illustrated Record and Review was a British Victorian-era illustrated weekly periodical founded in 1891 by Charles Norris Williamson.
Timothy Thomas Fortune (October 3, 1856 – June 2, 1928) was an American orator, civil rights leader, journalist, writer, editor and publisher. He was the highly influential editor of the nation's leading black newspaper The New York Age and was the leading economist in the black community.