روابط خارجية
- مقالات تستعمل روابط فنية بلا صلة مع ويكي بيانات
المصادر
- ^ *George S. Schuyler, “Our White Folks,” American Mercury, v. 22, no. 48 (December 1927), 385–392. Lead article.
*George S. Schuyler, “Keeping the Negro in His Place,” American Mercury, v. 17, no. 68 (August 1929), 469–476.
*George S. Schuyler, “A Negro Looks Ahead,” American Mercury, v. 17, no. 74 (February 1930), 212–220.
*George S. Schuyler, “Traveling Jim Crow,” American Mercury, v. 20, no. 80 (August 1930), 423–432.
*“George S. Schuyler,” in "Editorial Notes,” American Mercury, v. 20, no. 80 (August 1930), xx–xxii. Illustration, account of his military service, accomplishments.
*George S. Schuyler, “Black Warriors,” American Mercury, v. 21, no. 83 (November 1930), 288–297.
*George S. Schuyler, "Memoirs of a Pearl Diver," American Mercury, v. 22, no. 88 (April 1931), 487–496.
*George S. Schuyler, "Black America Begins to Doubt," American Mercury, v. 25, no. 100 (April 1932), 423–430.
*George S. Schuyler, “Black Art,” American Mercury, v. 27, no. 107 (November 1932), 335–342.
*George S. Schuyler, “Uncle Sam's Black Step-Child,” American Mercury, v. 29, no. 114 (June 1933), 147–156. “Liberia is at once the hope and the despair of all race-conscious Negroes and friendly whites. In its early years it seemed a glorious vindication of the black race's capacity for self-government, but today only the lunatic fringe of Garveyite Aframaniacs remains deluded.”
- ^ Williams (2007), pp. 4–5.
- ^ Schuyler، George (1926). "The Negro-Art Hokum". في Lewis، David Levering (المحرر). The Portable Harlem Renaissance Reader. Viking Penguin (1994). ص. 97.