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William Loren Katz (1927-2019) was born in Brooklyn and grew up in Greenwich Village in a progressive family dedicated to social justice. After serving in WWII and attending college on the GI Bill, he became a teacher in New York for many years. The author of more than 40 books, many for younger readers including Breaking the Chains (reissued by Seven Stories in 2023), he documented the often overlooked contributions of black and indigenous people through history. Through his scholarship and educational outreach, he helped to refashion social studies curriculums across the country, encouraging the histories of minorities and women to be part of American history courses rather than siloed into their own fields of study. In one of his best-known books, Black Indians, he wrote, “I have been humbled by the awesome task of rejecting bias. I have never sought bland neutrality and have consoled myself that unbiased history has yet to be written.”
Herb Boyd is a journalist, activist, and teacher who has written or edited over 20 books, including Black Detroit and Baldwin's Harlem, a biography of James Baldwin, both finalists for NAACP Image Awards, and the anthology Brotherman: The Odyssey of Black Men in America, co-edited with Robert Allen, which was a recipient of a 1995 American Book Award. Several of his books inlcuding Civil Rights: Yesterday & Today, We Shall Overcome, Autobiography of a People and The Harlem Reader have been adopted for use in classrooms around the country. He has written for many publications including the Amsterdam News, Cineaste, and The Black Scholar. Boyd lives and works in Harlem, New York City.
Alan Singer is a social studies educator and historian at Hofstra University, and a former New York City high school teacher. Dr. Singer is a graduate of the City College of New York and has a Ph.D. in American history from Rutgers University. He is the author of many books including Social Studies For Secondary Schools, 5th Edition (Routledge, 2024), Teaching Climate History (Routledge 2022), New York and Slavery, Time to Teach the Truth (SUNY, 2008), New York’s Grand Emancipation Jubilee (SUNY, 2018), and Class-Conscious Coal Miners (SUNY, 2024). He was a participating historian in “Defining Moments: The Civil Rights Movement in North Hempstead” and the editor of the “New York and Slavery: Complicity and Resistance” curriculum guide. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
Imani Hinson is a high school social studies teacher in Howard County, Maryland. She holds degrees in Social Studies Education and History from Hofstra University, and a Master's degree in History from Brooklyn College, where she won the award for outstanding thesis, a report which focused on the desegregation of schools on Long Island. Currently pursuing her EdD in Educational Leadership K-12 at Virginia Commonwealth University, Imani's research has centered around topics such as school desegregation, reparations, and African American history. She has published in Newsday on the anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, and co-produced work on African Americans’ agency in New York for the New Jersey Council for Social Studies. She is a curriculum reviewer for the College Board AP African American Studies program. |