Business and Culture in the 20th and 21st Centuries | APAAS

Business and Culture in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries

This final section of the course examines African Americans in politics, the performing arts, sports, and sciences, while also exploring contemporary demography and Afrofuturism. Topics may include:
 


Image Source: NASA. STS-47 Mission Specialist Mae C. Jemison floating in the Science Module aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour. September 1992. National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Mae Jemison, a Black woman, wearing an astronaut's uniform (yellow shirt with mission patch, blue cargo pants, grey slippers) aboard the space shuttle. She is floating in zero gravity surrounded by science stations, with a video camera floating to her left.
  • Topics 4.15–4.21

Topic 4.15

Economic Growth and Black Political Representation

Learning Objectives

Essentials

Learning Objectives

LO 4.15.A

Explain how economic growth in Black communities has been hindered and promoted in the second half of the twentieth century

LO 4.15.B

Explain how the Voting Rights Act of 1965 impacted the growth of Black political representation in American politics in the late twentieth century

LO 4.15.C

Describe major advances in Black federal political leadership in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries

Essentials

Terms

  • Voting Rights Act

People

  • Barack Obama
  • Michelle Obama
  • Colin Powell

Required Sources

You will need to understand and be able to use these materials for the AP exam.

Additional Resources

You can further develop your knowledge of this topic with primary and secondary sources.

Black Women in Entrepreneurship

by Andrea Smith-Hunter

Learn about the challenges and opportunities Black women entrepreneurs face, from financial barriers to networking, mentorship, and growth.

  • Essay

“Empirical Evidence”

by Damien Davis

View a work of art paying homage to the African American community of Mount Vernon, NY.

  • Work of Art

Featured Videos

These videos from Black History in Two Minutes (or So) feature condensed, engaging, and fact-packed stories.

In these videos, take a deep dive into twentieth and twenty-first century stories of Black economic and political power.

Topic 4.16

Demographic and Religious Diversity in Contemporary Black Communities

Learning Objectives

Essentials

Learning Objectives

LO 4.16.A

Describe ways the African American population has grown and become more diverse since 2000.

LO 4.16.B

Explain how religion and faith have played dynamic social, educational, and communitybuilding roles in African American communities.

Essentials

Terms

  • US Census Bureau

Required Sources

You will need to understand and be able to use these materials for the AP exam.

Additional Resources

You can further develop your knowledge of this topic with primary and secondary sources.

“Great Waves of Immigration”

by Carmen Lizardo

Explore the history of Afro-Caribbean migration to the US through this mosaic, installed in the New York City subway system.

  • Work of Art

Featured Videos

These videos from Black History in Two Minutes (or So) feature condensed, engaging, and fact-packed stories.


Learn more about one unique example of religious diversity, through the lens of the life and impact of Father Divine.

Topic 4.17

The Evolution of African American Music: From Spirituals to Hip-Hop

Learning Objectives

Essentials

Learning Objectives

LO 4.17.A

Describe ways African American music blends musical and performative traditions from Africa.

LO 4.17.B

Describe the influence of the African American musical tradition on American and global music genres.

LO 4.17.C

Describe the origins and elements that define hip-hop culture.

LO 4.17.D

Explain how African American political and cultural movements of the 1960s and 1970s influenced the emergence of hip-hop

Essentials

Terms

  • syncopation
  • Spirituals
  • Blues
  • Jazz
  • Gospel
  • Rhythm and Blues (R&B)
  • Hip-Hop
  • Breakdancing
  • B-boys/B-girls

Required Sources

You will need to understand and be able to use these materials for the AP exam.

Additional Resources

You can further develop your knowledge of this topic with primary and secondary sources.

Hip-Hop in Cedar Park

by NYC Parks

Hear from DJ Kool Herc and others as they remember the early days of hip-hop in the Bronx.

  • Video

Featured Videos

These videos from Black History in Two Minutes (or So) feature condensed, engaging, and fact-packed stories.


Birth of Hip Hop


Birth of Modern Gospel


Resources from Our Partners

We have teamed up with New American History on interactive resources exploring America’s past and harnessing the power of digital media, curiosity, and inquiry.

Logo for Bunk History

New American History Logo


It’s Bigger Than Hip-Hop

We cannot understand the last fifty years of U.S. history—certainly not the first thing about Black history—without studying the emergence and evolution of rap.

Explore Activity


Topic 4.18

Black Life in Theater, TV, and Film

Learning Objectives

Essentials

Learning Objectives

LO 4.18.A

Describe representations of African Americans on the stage and screen by African Americans in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

LO 4.18.B

Explain how migration and economic growth influenced representations of African Americans in television and film.

Essentials

Terms

  • Soul Train
  • The Jeffersons (1975–1985)
  • The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (1990–1996)
  • Good Times (1974–1979)
  • Black-ish (2014–2022)

People

  • Oscar Micheaux
  • Don Cornelius

Required Sources

You will need to understand and be able to use these materials for the AP exam.

“Soul Train”

1970

Get a sense of Soul Train’s cultural impact through this photograph.

  • Primary Source

Additional Resources

You can further develop your knowledge of this topic with primary and secondary sources.

Featured Videos

These videos from Black History in Two Minutes (or So) feature condensed, engaging, and fact-packed stories.


Oscar Micheaux


Protesting Birth of a Nation


Soul Train


Resources from Our Partners

We have teamed up with New American History on interactive resources exploring America’s past and harnessing the power of digital media, curiosity, and inquiry.

Logo for Bunk History

New American History Logo


How Oscar Micheaux Challenged the Racism of Early Hollywood

The black filmmaker Oscar Micheaux was one of the first to make films for a black audience, a rebuke to racist movies like “The Birth of a Nation.”

Explore Activity


Topic 4.19

African Americans and Sports

Learning Objectives

Essentials

Learning Objectives

LO 4.19.A

Describe the contributions of Black athletes to sports in the nineteenth century and beyond.

LO 4.19.B

Explain how African American athletes in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have contested discrimination and advocated for racial equality.

Essentials

Terms

  • Colored Hockey League of the Maritimes

People

  • Oliver Lewis
  • William “Billy” Walker
  • Jackie Robinson
  • Jesse Owens
  • Muhammad Ali
  • Tommie Smith
  • John Carlos
  • Colin Kaepernick

Required Sources

You will need to understand and be able to use these materials for the AP exam.

Additional Resources

You can further develop your knowledge of this topic with primary and secondary sources.

Hidden History: Jack Johnson

with Samuel Collins III, Linda Heywood, and Bob Spagnola

Explore the life and legacy of the “Galveston Giant” and champion boxer.

  • Video

Jack Johnson

by Eddie Flier

View this artistic homage to boxing champion Jack Johnson.

  • Work of Art

Featured Videos

These videos from Black History in Two Minutes (or So) feature condensed, engaging, and fact-packed stories.


Take a deep dive into the career of Hank Aaron, the last active Negro League baseball player in the Major Leagues post-integration, and for thirty years the all-time home run king.


Explore the life and legacy of heavyweight boxing champion Jack Johnson.


Gain a greater understanding of Jackie Robinson’s career and legacy.


Explore the history of the Negro Leagues and their place in Black communities across the country.


Resources from Our Partners

We have teamed up with New American History on interactive resources exploring America’s past and harnessing the power of digital media, curiosity, and inquiry.

Logo for Bunk History

New American History Logo


Connections for: Black Power Salute

Compare the 1968 Olympians’ protest and the NFL protests in 2016 with this audio clip and video segment.

Explore Activity


Topic 4.20

Science, Medicine, and Technology in Black Communities

Learning Objectives

Essentials

Learning Objectives

LO 4.20.A

Describe African Americans’ contributions to scientific or technological advancements.

LO 4.20.B

Describe African Americans’ contributions to American medical care, training, and medical advancements.

LO 4.20.C

Describe multiple, compounding forms of discrimination against Black people with disabilities as well as governmental responses.

Essentials

People

  • George Washington Carver
  • Theodore Roosevelt
  • Katherine Johnson
  • Mae Jemison
  • Daniel Hale Williams
  • Kizzmekia Corbett
  • Onesimus

Required Sources

You will need to understand and be able to use these materials for the AP exam.

Additional Resources

You can further develop your knowledge of this topic with primary and secondary sources.

Featured Videos

These videos from Black History in Two Minutes (or So) feature condensed, engaging, and fact-packed stories.

Take a closer look at key moments, discoveries, and scandals in African American medical and technological history.

Topic 4.21

Black Studies, Black Futures, and Afrofuturism

Learning Objectives

Essentials

Learning Objectives

LO 4.21.A

Explain how the discipline of African American Studies has contributed to interdisciplinary academic studies.

LO 4.21.B

Explain how Afrofuturism envisions Black lives in futuristic environments.

Essentials

Terms

  • Afrofuturism
  • Black Panther

People

  • Benjamin Banneker
  • Sun Ra
  • Phillis Wheatley

Required Sources

You will need to understand and be able to use these materials for the AP exam.

Additional Resources

You can further develop your knowledge of this topic with primary and secondary sources.