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  1. 19 de jun. de 2024 · Aside from the project itself, no one has faced more scrutiny than its creator, Nikole Hannah-Jones. The publication of the project is the culmination of a twenty-plus-year career in journalism which resulted in her winning a Pulitzer Prize and becoming a Macarthur Genius Grant recipient.

  2. 27 de jun. de 2024 · How does Hannah-Jones reconcile her defense of her father’s patriotism with her claims that anti-black racism is imprinted in the country’s DNA and remains endemic in America? What does she mean by her claims that black Americans are America’s true founders and the most American of all?

  3. Hace 6 días · An investigative journalist, educator, and civil rights leader whose career spanned the Reconstruction Era, the Plessy vs. Ferguson “separate but equal” Supreme Court decision, and the women’s suffrage movement, Wells was born into slavery in Mississippi.

  4. 2 de jul. de 2024 · Nikole Hannah-Jones is a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for The New York Times Magazine. Nikole has written extensively about school resegregation across the country and chronicled the decades-long failure of the federal government to enforce the landmark 1968 Fair Housing Act.

  5. Hace 3 días · COLLINGSWOOD – Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones, creator of The 1619 Project, paid a visit here on July 9 at a crowded Scottish Rite Auditorium.. The colorful owner of Ida’s Bookshop, Jeannine A. Cook, planned a “birthday party” of sorts for Ida B. Wells, the legendary journalist and civil rights activist who was born July 16, 1862.

  6. 8 de jul. de 2024 · Nikole Hannah-Jones is the Pulitzer Prize-winning creator ofThe 1619 Project” and a staff writer at The New York Times Magazine. Her books, “The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story,” and the children’s book, “The 1619 Project: Born on the Water,” have topped The New York Times best seller list.

  7. Hace 2 días · Nikole Hannah-Jones joined ProPublica in late 2011, where she covered civil rights with a focus on segregation and discrimination in housing and schools. She is currently a staff writer at the New York Times.