Introduction: On the beginning(s) of epistemic apartheid : Du Bois, intellectual segregation, conceptual incarceration, and the disciplinary decadence of sociology
Du Bois and the early development of urban and rural sociology : The Philadelphia Negro and the sociology of the souls of Black farming folk
Du Bois and the sociology of race : the sociology of the souls of Black and White (among other) folk
Du Bois and the sociology of gender : "the damnation of women," "the freedom of womanhood," and the insurgent intersectional sociology of the souls of Black (among other) female folk
Du Bois and the sociology of religion : the sociology of the souls of religious Black (among other) folk
Du Bois and the sociology of education : critiquing the (mis)education of Black (among other) folk
Du Bois and the sociology of crime : critiquing the racial criminalization of Black (among other) folk
Conclusion: On ending epistemic apartheid : continuing Du Bois's transdisciplinary trangressions.