CarmichaelStokeley. “What We Want.” In: The New York Review of Books, N.Y., v. 7, no. 4, September 22, 1966. Also excerpts in The Negro in 20th Century America, ed. by FranklinJ. H. and StarrI., N.Y., Vintage, 1967, pp. 175–181.
2.
CarmichaelStokeley and HamiltonCharles V.. Black Power: The Politics of Liberation. N.Y., Random House, 1967.
3.
ClarkeJohn H.“The Morning Train to Ibadan.” In: Journal of Negro Education, Washington, D.C., Fall 1962, pp. 527–530.
4.
CookMercer. “The African Presence.” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, September 1964, pp. 85–97.
5.
DuBoisWilliam E. B.The Autobiography of W. E. B. DuBois. N.Y., International Publishers Co., 1968. 448 pp. Includes selected bibliography.
6.
FormanJames. 1967: High Tide of Black Resistance. N.Y., Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, 1967. 27 pp.
7.
DuBoisGraham Shirley. “What Happened in Ghana?” In: Free-domways, N.Y., v. 6, no. 3, Winter 1963, pp. 471–485.
8.
HansberryWilliam L.“Africa: The World's Richest Continent.” In: Ibid., pp. 59–77.
9.
HartThomas A.“Ghana, West Africa, As I Saw It.” In: Journal of Negro Education, Washington, D.C., Winter 1962, pp. 92–96.
10.
HowardCharles P.“Unity of Somalia.” In: Freedomways, N.Y., Spring 1964, pp. 227–237.
11.
JohnsonBrooks. “Can African Students Get a Better Education in Africa?” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, January 1963, pp. 43–47.
12.
JohnsonBrooks. “The Red Chinese in Africa.” In: Ibid., December 1963, pp. 27–35.
13.
JohnsonChristine. “Letter on the Ghana Coup.” In: Freedomways, N.Y., Spring 1966, pp. 152–158.
14.
JohnsonWillard. “African-Speaking Africa? Lessons From the Cameroon.” In: African Forum, N.Y., Fall 1965, pp. 65–77.
15.
KilsonMartin. “Politics of African Socialism.” In: Ibid., Winter 1966, pp. 17–26.
16.
LincolnC. Eric. “Color and Group Identity in the United States.” In: Daedalus, Boston, Spring 1967, pp. 527–541.
17.
MalcolmX.Malcolm X Speaks: Selected Speeches and Statements. New York, Merit, 1965. 242 pp.
18.
MossJames A.“United States and Africa: A Timely Reassessment.” In: Journal of Human Relations, Wilberforce, Ohio, v. 14, 2nd quarter, 1966, pp. 287–293.
19.
PicottJohn R.Africa: Report-Journey Into a Continent. n.p., n.d. l.v. Paper in Moorland Foundation, Founders Library, Howard University, Washington, D.C.
20.
ReddingSaunders. “An American Writer in Africa.” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, December 1962.
21.
RobinsonJames H.Africa at the Crossroads. Philadelphia, Westminister Press, 1962. 83 pp.
22.
WaltonEugene. “Things Fall Apart: The Nigeria Dilemma in Perspective.” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, July 1967, pp. 31–33.
23.
ClarkJohn H.“Africa and the American Negro Press.” In: Journal of Negro Education, Washington, D.C., XXX (1961), pp. 64–68.
24.
ClarkJohn H.“The New Afro-American Nationalism.” In: Freedomways, N.Y., Fall 1961, pp. 285–295.
25.
ClarkJohn H.“The Search for Africa.” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, February 1968, pp. 29–32+.
26.
ChickC. A.“The American Negro's Changing Attitudes Toward Africa.” In: Journal of Negro Education, Washington, D.C., Fall 1962, pp. 531–535.
27.
CruseHarold. “Ideology in Black: African, Afro-American, Afro-West Indian and the Nationalist Mood.” In: The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual, N.Y., Morrow, 1967, pp. 420–448.
28.
DrakeSt. Clair. “Negro Americans and the Africa Interest.” In: The American Negro Reference Book, ed. by DavisJohn P., Englewood Cliffs, N.J., Prentice-Hall, 1966, pp. 662–705.
29.
DrakeSt. Clair. “The Negro's Stake in Africa.” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, June 1964, pp. 33–48.
30.
DunbarErnest, ed. The Black Expatriates: The Study of American Negroes in Exile. New York, Dutton, 1968. 251 pp.
31.
EmersonRupert and KilsonMartin. “The Rise of Africa and the Negro-American.” In: Daedalus, Boston, Fall 1965, pp. 1055–1084.
32.
ForresterAnne M.Measuring Attitude Change on Africa Through Program Exposure to the Museum of African Art, Washington, D.C. Unpublished paper, Moorland Foundation, Founders Library, Howard University, 1967.
33.
FrazierE. Franklin. “What Can the American Negro Contribute to the Social Development of Africa?” In: Africa Seen by American Negro Scholars, New York, American Society of African Culture, 1963, pp. 263–278.
34.
HansberryWilliam L.“W. E. B. DuBois' Influence on African History,” In: Freedomways, N.Y., Winter 1965, pp. 73–87.
35.
HicksJ. H.“Negroes and African Nationalism” In: Social Order, April 1961, pp. 150–151.
36.
JohnsonBrooks, “Do Negroes and Africans Really Dig Each Other?” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, May 1966, pp. 4–10.
37.
KillensJohn O.“Brothers of Blackness.” In: Ibid., May 1966, pp. 4–10.
38.
LoganRayford W.“The American Negro's View of Africa.” In: Africa Seen By American Negro Scholars, N.Y., American Society of African Culture, 1963, pp. 217–227.
39.
MalcolmX.Malcolm X on Afro-American History, New York, Merit, 1967. 48 pp.
40.
ReddingSaunders. “Home To Africa.” In: Negro Digest, Chicago, May 1963, pp. 80–87.
41.
SinnetteCalvin. “An American Negro's Reflections On His Trip to Africa.” In: Freedomways, N.Y., Fall 1962, pp. 487–491.
42.
SkinnerElliot P.“African, Afro-American, White American: A Case of Pride and Prejudice.” In: Ibid., Summer 1965, pp. 380–395.
43.
Smith, Ed. Where To, Black Man? An American Negro's African Diary. Chicago, Quadrangle, 1967. 221 pp.