TELEVISION

MasterClass Presents: Black History, Black Freedom, and Black Love - Season 2

Series: Black History, Black Freedom, and Black Love
4.3
(32)
Episodes
20
Rating
TV14
Year
2022
Language
English

About

The Present, seven preeminent Black scholars continue their journey through the history you thought you knew, examining important topics such as the origin of critical race theory, the historic "Brown vs. Board of Education" Supreme Court case, and the legacy of Thurgood Marshall and his lasting effect on civil rights.

Related Subjects

Episodes

1 to 3 of 20

1. Meet Your Instructors

5m

In this introduction to Part II of a three-part class, seven preeminent Black scholars continue their journey through the history you thought you knew, considering white supremacy and Black love from the turn of the century to the present day.

2. Know the Black Intellectual Tradition

14m

Jelani Cobb continues a discussion of extraordinary Black voices established in Part I, John McWhorter explores the roots of his own "heterodox" thinking, and Cornel West examines revolutionary Christianity and seminal, divergent Black thinkers.

3. Lynching, White Supremacy, and the Law

12m

Sherrilyn Ifill unpacks the shameful history of lynching in America, exploring how forces of law and order were often deployed to terrorize Black citizens, such as George Armwood, whose murderers were never prosecuted or held responsible.

4. Transcending Victimization

9m

John McWhorter explains how our grandfathers accomplished amazing feats despite systemic racism. Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood, "The Black Metropolis," is one example of a thriving Black community built from Black love and resourcefulness.

5. The Least Insured and the Most Sick

10m

Nikole Hannah-Jones demonstrates how the legacy of slavery and forces of white supremacy have continued to impact the quality of healthcare received by all citizens well into the 21st century.

6. Government Fostered Segregation

12m

Nikole Hannah-Jones discusses how municipalities and the federal government responded to the influx of Black families during the Great Migration. Black citizens were denied the leg up that white citizens received, from the G.I. Bill to redlining.

Extended Details

Artists