Invisible Wings: An Annotated Bibliography on Blacks in Aviation, 1916-1993
By (Author) Betty Kaplan Gubert
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
5th January 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Bibliographies, catalogues
016.3877089
Hardback
312
Invisible Wings is the only reference book on Blacks in aviation. More than 1,600 entries give the bibliography the scope and length that will enable scholars, researchers, and students to delve into this little studied aspect of the Black experience. This annotated bibliography includes citations on pilots, flight attendants, air traffic controllers, mechanics, doctors, engineers, scientists, astronauts, and others whose achievements in aeronautics, commerical and military, are unrecognized. The first four chapters highlight the major figures, and the next five chapters annotate books and articles on airlines, Chicago, discrimination, history, and women. The work covers three quarters of the twentieth century from 1916 to 1993, with one of the earliest articles describing the world's first Black pilot, Eugene J. Bullard, and one of the most recent covering the first African American in space, Guion S. Bluford.
.,."an important work that deserves commendation and a place in all collections supporting African American, technical, or aeronautical studies."-Choice
...an important work that deserves commendation and a place in all collections supporting African American, technical, or aeronautical studies.-Choice
With growing interest in the role of African Americans in the science and technology fields, this is a useful source. Teachers at all levels will find plenty of information to broaden their own understanding and to offer their classes, and college students can use this volume as a starting point for writing research papers and learning more about the field.-MultiCultural Review
..."an important work that deserves commendation and a place in all collections supporting African American, technical, or aeronautical studies."-Choice
"With growing interest in the role of African Americans in the science and technology fields, this is a useful source. Teachers at all levels will find plenty of information to broaden their own understanding and to offer their classes, and college students can use this volume as a starting point for writing research papers and learning more about the field."-MultiCultural Review
BETTY KAPLAN GUBERT had been head of the General Research and Reference Division of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library for twenty-one years when she retired in 1991. She is the editor of Early Black Bibliographies, 1863-1918 (1982) and author of numerous articles in the field of Black Studies. She is currently the art editor of MultiCultural Review and consults on various publishing projects.