There are many small ways to make black
history part of your daily life and keep educating yourself because black history isn't just black history, it's the world's history.
Not exact matches
The
Daily Prophet told
of a popular book by Rita Skeeter, The
Life and Lies
of Albus Dumbledore, revealing Dumbledore's Dark Secrets (betrayed in
part by «magical historian» Bathilda Bagshot, who had studied Dumbledore's
history and first met him at his family's home in Godric's Hollow).
Join Mark Williams on the first
part of this odyssey through the
history, geography, culture and
daily life of the country he calls his home — The Gambia and the region he calls his back yard — West Africa.
This idea
of holistically consuming our human stories, including the many that are normally excluded from
history — while it has become a normal
part of daily digital
living — was inconceivable in the 1980s when the Guerrilla Girls became famous for storming cultural institutions and media outlets to take on the political plight
of better representation for women in the arts.