Atlanta Black Star, 5 Signs Showing You May Suffer From 'Mental Slavery' by Dr. Amos Wilson, by A Moore (March 21, 2014)
[3] (Retrieved 29 March 2019)
books.google.com
Jackson-Lowman, H., and Jamison, D.F., Honoring the scholarship of Amos Wilson (2013), The Journal of Pan African Studies, 6(2), 4-8 [in] Kiara Thorp and Andrea D. Lewis. "Amos Wilson 1940 - 1995" [in] Lewis, Andrea D., Taylor, Nicole A., Unsung Legacies of Educators and Events in African American Education (Chapter 12), Springer (2019), p. 75-79, ISBN9783319901282. For year of birth (1940), see page 78:
"Dr. Amos N. Wilson was born in Hattiesburg, Mississippi in 1940 to Lugenia and Oscar Wilson (Jackson-Lowman & Jamison, 2013). Wilson attended Morehouse College and furthered his education at the New School for Social Research and Fordham University..."[1]
Amos N. Wilson, "African Centered Consciousness Vs. New World Order: Garveyism in the Age of Globalism" (1999) [in] Howard, Kamm (The Amos N. Wilson Institute), Awakening the Natural Genius in Black Children Workshop, The Journal of Pan African Studies, vol.6, no.2 (July 2013), pp. 86-90 (PDF, pp. 4-8) [7] (Retrieved 30 March 2018)
ourtimepress.com
Our Time Press, Dr. Amos Wilson: Why We Do The Things We Do, February 26, 2016 [5]
questia.com
Review of Honoring the Scholarship of Amos Wilson by Jackson-Lowman, Huberta; Jamison, DeReef F. [in] The Journal of Pan African Studies [2]Archived 2019-03-30 at the Wayback Machine
web.archive.org
Review of Honoring the Scholarship of Amos Wilson by Jackson-Lowman, Huberta; Jamison, DeReef F. [in] The Journal of Pan African Studies [2]Archived 2019-03-30 at the Wayback Machine
Wilson, Amos N. (1993). The falsification of Afrikan consciousness : Eurocentric history, psychiatry, and the politics of white supremacy (1st ed.). New York: Afrikan World InfoSystems. ISBN1-879164-02-7. OCLC29859652.