By embracing Pan-Africanism, W. E. B. Du Bois was acknowledging __________
A) his acceptance of the back-to-Africa movement
B) his sense of alienation from America and Americans
C) that the color line was a global problem
D) the collapse of the civil rights movement in America
Answer: C
You might also like to view...
Virgin soil epidemics are characterized by __________.
A. outbreaks of disease that strike for the first time against a completely unprotected population B. extreme drought that results in devastating famine C. infectious diseases caused by sexual intimacy D. frequent recurrences of the same disease within a specific population
How did local, Indian, and Chinese elements and influences interact to help shape the societies of early Southeast Asia? Were Southeast Asian cultures really unique, or were they largely based upon those of India and/or China?
What will be an ideal response?
Publication of Denis Diderot's Encyclopédie was difficult because:
a. It was banned as subversive by the Catholic Church and the French monarchy. b. Most of the articles had to be translated into English in order to widen its market. c. All of its four volumes appeared in one set in 1772, forcing printers to work overtime. d. His collaborator, Jean le Rond d'Alembert, died in the midst of the project.
The Great Recession of 2008 that rocked the world in the autumn of that year was
a. precipitated by the bursting of the American housing bubble. b. prompted by the sudden, unanticipated ending of the Federal Reserve System's easy-money policies. c. caused by the unsuccessful nationalization of the two biggest mortgage companies, "Freddie Mac" and "Fannie Mae." d. caused by the collapse of the Wall Street investment firm of Lehman Brothers. e. not immediately addressed by the Bush administration, which took several months before responding to the economic collapse.