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supremacy.systems

The archive

Primary-source documents

Texts the dominant story under-stocked. Filterable by region, era, and theme. Public-domain works are reproduced in full; in-copyright works are excerpted with source links.

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What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?
Americas Pre-1900

What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?

Frederick Douglass, 1852

Douglass's 1852 Rochester address — invited to speak on the meaning of the Fourth of July, he asks instead what the holiday signifies to a people still in chains. One of…

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The Talented Tenth (excerpt)
Americas Pre-1900 Reserved (not yet available)

The Talented Tenth (excerpt)

W.E.B. Du Bois, 1903

Du Bois's 1903 essay arguing that the Black race, like all races, is going to be saved by its exceptional men — and that the education of the Black intelligentsia is the…

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We Wear the Mask
Americas Pre-1900

We Wear the Mask

Paul Laurence Dunbar, 1896

Dunbar's 1896 sonnet, written when the poet was twenty-four and already the most-published Black American poet of his generation. The mask of the title — the public face…

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Address to the World's Anti-Slavery Convention
Europe (diaspora / critique from within) Pre-1900

Address to the World's Anti-Slavery Convention

Sarah Parker Remond, 1859

Sarah Parker Remond was an African-American abolitionist who spent the late 1850s on a speaking tour of Britain and Ireland, addressing audiences on the conditions of sl…

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On Being Brought from Africa to America
Americas Pre-1900

On Being Brought from Africa to America

Phillis Wheatley, 1773

Wheatley's eight-line poem, published in her 1773 London collection. Often misread as accommodation; read again, the second quatrain turns sharply: 'Remember, Christians…

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Lift Every Voice and Sing (text)
Americas Pre-1900

Lift Every Voice and Sing (text)

James Weldon Johnson, 1900

James Weldon Johnson's 1900 hymn, set to music by his brother John Rosamond Johnson. Adopted as the Black National Anthem by the NAACP in 1919. Three stanzas of memory, …

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