Pan-African History
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Kwame Nkrumah and the Pan- African Vision: Between Acceptance and Rebuttal
Austral: Brazilian Journal of Strategy & International Relations e-ISSN 2238-6912 | ISSN 2238-6262| v.5, n.9, Jan./Jun. 2016 | p.141-164 KWAME NKRUMAH AND THE PAN- AFRICAN VISION: BETWEEN ACCEPTANCE AND REBUTTAL Henry Kam Kah1 Introduction The Pan-African vision of a United of States of Africa was and is still being expressed (dis)similarly by Africans on the continent and those of Afri- can descent scattered all over the world. Its humble origins and spread is at- tributed to several people based on their experiences over time. Among some of the advocates were Henry Sylvester Williams, Marcus Garvey and George Padmore of the diaspora and Peter Abrahams, Jomo Kenyatta, Sekou Toure, Julius Nyerere and Kwame Nkrumah of South Africa, Kenya, Guinea, Tanza- nia and Ghana respectively. The different pan-African views on the African continent notwithstanding, Kwame Nkrumah is arguably in a class of his own and perhaps comparable only to Mwalimu Julius Nyerere. Pan-Africanism became the cornerstone of his struggle for the independence of Ghana, other African countries and the political unity of the continent. To transform this vision into reality, Nkrumah mobilised the Ghanaian masses through a pop- ular appeal. Apart from his eloquent speeches, he also engaged in persuasive writings. These writings have survived him and are as appealing today as they were in the past. Kwame Nkrumah ceased every opportunity to persuasively articulate for a Union Government for all of Africa. Due to his unswerving vision for a Union Government for Africa, the visionary Kwame Nkrumah created a microcosm of African Union through the Ghana-Guinea and then Ghana-Guinea-Mali Union. -
The Gordian Knot: Apartheid & the Unmaking of the Liberal World Order, 1960-1970
THE GORDIAN KNOT: APARTHEID & THE UNMAKING OF THE LIBERAL WORLD ORDER, 1960-1970 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of the Ohio State University By Ryan Irwin, B.A., M.A. History ***** The Ohio State University 2010 Dissertation Committee: Professor Peter Hahn Professor Robert McMahon Professor Kevin Boyle Professor Martha van Wyk © 2010 by Ryan Irwin All rights reserved. ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the apartheid debate from an international perspective. Positioned at the methodological intersection of intellectual and diplomatic history, it examines how, where, and why African nationalists, Afrikaner nationalists, and American liberals contested South Africa’s place in the global community in the 1960s. It uses this fight to explore the contradictions of international politics in the decade after second-wave decolonization. The apartheid debate was never at the center of global affairs in this period, but it rallied international opinions in ways that attached particular meanings to concepts of development, order, justice, and freedom. As such, the debate about South Africa provides a microcosm of the larger postcolonial moment, exposing the deep-seated differences between politicians and policymakers in the First and Third Worlds, as well as the paradoxical nature of change in the late twentieth century. This dissertation tells three interlocking stories. First, it charts the rise and fall of African nationalism. For a brief yet important moment in the early and mid-1960s, African nationalists felt genuinely that they could remake global norms in Africa’s image and abolish the ideology of white supremacy through U.N. -
Pan-African History: Political Figures from Africa and the Diaspora Since 1787 Hakim Adi University of Chichester, [email protected]
African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter Volume 8 Article 6 Issue 4 September 2005 7-1-2005 Pan-African History: Political Figures from Africa and the Diaspora since 1787 Hakim Adi University of Chichester, [email protected] Marika Sherwood University of London Robert Trent Vinson Washington University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/adan Part of the African American Studies Commons, African History Commons, African Languages and Societies Commons, African Studies Commons, American Art and Architecture Commons, American Material Culture Commons, Archaeological Anthropology Commons, Biological and Physical Anthropology Commons, Folklore Commons, Other American Studies Commons, Other History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons, Other International and Area Studies Commons, Social and Cultural Anthropology Commons, Social History Commons, and the Women's Studies Commons Recommended Citation Adi, Hakim; Sherwood, Marika; and Vinson, Robert Trent (2005) "Pan-African History: Political Figures from Africa and the Diaspora since 1787," African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter: Vol. 8 : Iss. 4 , Article 6. Available at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/adan/vol8/iss4/6 This Book Reviews is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in African Diaspora Archaeology Newsletter by an authorized editor of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Adi et al.: Pan-African History: Political Figures from Africa and the Diaspo Book Review H-NET BOOK REVIEW Published by H-SAfrica, http://www.h-net.org/~safrica/ (April, 2005) and H-Atlantic, http://www.h-net.org/~atlantic (June 2005). Hakim Adi and Marika Sherwood. -
Black Internationalism and African and Caribbean
BLACK INTERNATIONALISM AND AFRICAN AND CARIBBEAN INTELLECTUALS IN LONDON, 1919-1950 By MARC MATERA A Dissertation submitted to the Graduate School-New Brunswick Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey In partial fulfillment of the requirements For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in History Written under the direction of Professor Bonnie G. Smith And approved by _______________________ _______________________ _______________________ _______________________ New Brunswick, New Jersey May 2008 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Black Internationalism and African and Caribbean Intellectuals in London, 1919-1950 By MARC MATERA Dissertation Director: Bonnie G. Smith During the three decades between the end of World War I and 1950, African and West Indian scholars, professionals, university students, artists, and political activists in London forged new conceptions of community, reshaped public debates about the nature and goals of British colonialism, and prepared the way for a revolutionary and self-consciously modern African culture. Black intellectuals formed organizations that became homes away from home and centers of cultural mixture and intellectual debate, and launched publications that served as new means of voicing social commentary and political dissent. These black associations developed within an atmosphere characterized by a variety of internationalisms, including pan-ethnic movements, feminism, communism, and the socialist internationalism ascendant within the British Left after World War I. The intellectual and political context of London and the types of sociability that these groups fostered gave rise to a range of black internationalist activity and new regional imaginaries in the form of a West Indian Federation and a United West Africa that shaped the goals of anticolonialism before 1950. -
Harold Arundel Moody and the League of Coloured Peoples*
Harold Arundel Moody and the League of Coloured Peoples* Takehiko Ochiai I. Introduction The purpose of this article is to consider the activities of the League of Coloured Peoples (LCP). which played a significant role in British society from the 1930s through the 1940s in exposing racial discrimination against black people and in fostering pan-Africanism, as well as the ideas and actions of its Jamaican founder, Dr Harold Arundel Moody. The pan-Africanists who lived in British society from the 1930s through the 1940s had to face, to a greater or a lesser extent, at least two questions. The first one was the emancipation of their black brothers overseas; the second was the improvement of the status of black people, and possibly the abolition of racial discrimination in Britain. However, as history clearly shows, the pan-Africanist movement would eventually morph in many ways *This article is the revised English version of the author's following Japanese essay: Ochiai, T. (1994) "Yushoku jinshu renmei to Harold Moody," Hogaku se1jigaku ronkyu: journal of Law and Political Studies, No. 23, pp. 251-278. The author would like to thank the Editorial Board of Ryukoku Law Review for allowing the English version of the essay to be published in the journal. (ft/2; '19) 52-1. I (I) into a huge wave of decolonisation-oriented nationalism in the wake of World War II, while the various issues of social racism surrounding black people in Britain would gradually be forgotten in the minds of pan-Africanists in Britain as secondary, if not trivial. -
BHM One-Pager Template
#blackhistorymonth#blackhistorymonth#blackhistorymonth "[We demand] full self- government at the earliest opportunity for people living WHY WERE THEY under British colonial rule, and an end to discrimination on IMPORTANT? racial grounds in all spheres of A philanthropist and Civil public life in the UK." Rights Campaigner The Charter of Coloured Peoples, 1944 Dr Moody’s experiences are exemplary for the rampant racism pervading all DR HAROLD MOODY levels of social, political and economic life in Edwardian Britain, showcasing Britain's Martin Luther King how racial bias overshadows education, achievement, and status. Nevertheless, as part of an intellectual elite, Dr Moody was in a position to build Born in 1882 in Kingston, Jamaica, the son of a pharmacist was determined to become an international network of influence. a doctor. In 1904 he moved to the UK to study medicine at King’s College London. Throughout the 1930s, the ‘League of Despite finishing top of his class, and obtaining numerous academic honours, he was Coloured Peoples’ and their newsletter repeatedly refused an appointment. One hospital matron stated they wouldn’t allow ‘The Keys’ challenged prejudice and ‘a coloured doctor’ to work there. Moddy then established his own medical practice in discrimination. Dr Moody has been at the Peckham, South-East London in 1913. forefront of many fights, personally His multiple ecumenical ties provided a network as well as a platform to push for confronting employers, and powerfully equal rights of people of colour. His home in Peckham became a place for West Indian arguing for black workers’ rights. Despite the racial injustice he had students and other travellers seeking assistance. -
Ideas Matter: Framing Pan-Africanism, Its Concept and History
Stichproben. Wiener Zeitschrift für kritische Afrikastudien / Vienna Journal of African Studies. No. 38/2020, Vol. 20, 5-31. doi:10.25365/phaidra.133 Ideas Matter: Framing Pan-Africanism, its Concept and History Arno Sonderegger1 Abstract This article looks at the rich history of Pan-Africanism considering its many twists and turns and ambiguities in order to provide an original frame for tackling the writing of its unfolding – both in the sense of the Pan-African concept`s development and its realisation in history. Therefore, it contains an extensive treatment and a critical discussion of Pan-Africanism`s historiography from Geiss (1968) to Adi (2018).The article hints at some crucial aspects so far missing or being underrepresented in prevailing accounts, regarding convincing readings of the entanglements between global, colonial and metropolitan levels in the historiography of Pan-Africanism. It is argued, in particular, that more attention should be paid to existing global histories of nationalism and of global racial discourses, and to the interplay between modern (European) political categories and modern (African) Pan-African ways of reasoning. Moreover, the ambiguities and diversity of colonial situations should be taken into account in a more sophisticated manner than is the case. The article sketches how 1 Arno Sonderegger, University of Vienna; contact: [email protected] I express my gratitude to the four reviewers Walter Schicho, Ingeborg Grau, Tomi Adeaga and Carl Bodenstein who took their time to help me notice some shortcomings in the first draft of this article and gave me the opportunity to rework it according to their suggestions. -
Left of Karl Marx : the Political Life of Black Communist Claudia Jones / Carole Boyce Davies
T H E POLI T I C A L L I F E O F B L A C K C OMMUNIS T LEFT O F K A R L M A R X C L A U D I A JONES Carole Boyce Davies LEFT OF KARL MARX THE POLITICAL LIFE OF BLACK LEFT OF KARL MARX COMMUNIST CLAUDIA JONES Carole Boyce Davies Duke University Press Durham and London 2007 ∫ 2008 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper $ Designed by Heather Hensley Typeset in Adobe Janson by Keystone Typesetting, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data appear on the last printed page of this book. CONTENTS Acknowledgments vii Preface xiii Chronology xxiii Introduction. Recovering the Radical Black Female Subject: Anti-Imperialism, Feminism, and Activism 1 1. Women’s Rights/Workers’ Rights/Anti-Imperialism: Challenging the Superexploitation of Black Working-Class Women 29 2. From ‘‘Half the World’’ to the Whole World: Journalism as Black Transnational Political Practice 69 3. Prison Blues: Literary Activism and a Poetry of Resistance 99 4. Deportation: The Other Politics of Diaspora, or ‘‘What is an ocean between us? We know how to build bridges.’’ 131 5. Carnival and Diaspora: Caribbean Community, Happiness, and Activism 167 6. Piece Work/Peace Work: Self-Construction versus State Repression 191 Notes 239 Bibliography 275 Index 295 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS his project owes everything to the spiritual guidance of Claudia Jones Therself with signs too many to identify. At every step of the way, she made her presence felt in ways so remarkable that only conversations with friends who understand the blurring that exists between the worlds which we inhabit could appreciate. -
Manning Marable, Malcolm X: a Life of Reinvention (London: Allen Lane 2011, 590Pp Hbk, £30)
Manning Marable, Malcolm X: A life of reinvention (London: Allen Lane 2011, 590pp hbk, £30) I got to know the author’s name while I lived in New York 1980-85 and read a left-wing weekly newspaper to which Marable was a regular contributor. Then he moved from I think Ohio State University to Columbia in New York, and we met a number of times on my subsequent visits to NY. A couple of years ago, when he heard that I had begun to work on Malcolm X’s travels, he invited me to give a seminar paper to his students and his co-researchers filmed an interview with me. I was certainly hopeful of the book. My hopes were dashed as soon as I heard the full title. What on earth did Marable mean by a ‘life of reinvention’? So I began to read the book trying to convince myself that this made some sense. My hopes were dashed. Just to give a few examples: on p.9 we read that ‘OAAU programs were choreographed’. Not quite the word I would use for whatever arrangements/preparations I have to undertake for any public meeting/conference I organise. And somehow it sounds very negative – part of this ‘reinvention’. Then a few pages further on we read that Malcolm had ‘layers of personality expressed as a series of different names’ (p.10) – well, so have I! And I would guess many of us have different names at different times in our lives as we assume/play different roles. However, I am certainly not one of those ‘many whites’ who had been ‘fascinated’ by Malcolm in a ‘sensual, animalistic way’ (p.10): I was overwhelmed by his strength, his intelligence, his determination to fight for equal rights ‘by whatever means necessary’. -
The Una Marson Interviews
Rasta Ites home Natty Mark Index Ites Zine The earlier interviews – one / two The Una Marson Interviews III Ruby and Crystal are rocking with laughter, in the Community FM radio station studio. Then Crystal breaks off, as airtime commences... Crystal: Good afternoon, dear listeners. And this part of the afternoon is going to be very good, because as you know, we have the wonderful Ruby Gayle with us. (turning to Ruby) On behalf of those listening, it's great to welcome you back, Ruby. Ruby: Thank you Mama Crystal. Crystal: Eh! I like that – Mama Crystal! Ruby: It's fitting, because you've cared for and nurtured me, over the last few months. You've guided me through this media exposure. So you're my Mother of the Airwaves! Crystal: Ahhh! That's beautiful. It's been a pleasure to support you. If I'm your Mother of the Airwaves, then you must be my Bringer of the Gems (they both laugh). Ruby: I hope so. As you know, I love coming here – and the feedback is always beautiful. You're truly honoured, to have such a warm audience. Crystal: I know. They bless me every afternoon. I leave the studio, with an extra bounce in my step. Ruby: As I do, when I come here. Crystal: Amen! (They both laugh) So. I know there was a good response to your first Gazette article. My daughter intends to quote from it, in her project on Black Women Journalists. Talking of the article is apt, as today's Una Marson interview, will focus on her journalism. -
UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA Los Angeles the Red Star State
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles The Red Star State: State-Capitalism, Socialism, and Black Internationalism in Ghana, 1957-1966 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in History by Kwadwo Osei-Opare © Copyright by Kwadwo Osei-Opare The Red Star State: State-Capitalism, Socialism, and Black Internationalism in Ghana, 1957-1966 by Kwadwo Osei-Opare Doctor of Philosophy in History University of California, Los Angeles, 2019 Professor Andrew Apter, Chair The Red Star State charts a new history of global capitalism and socialism in relation to Ghana and Ghana’s first postcolonial leader, Kwame Nkrumah. By tracing how Soviet connections shaped Ghana’s post-colonial economic ideologies, its Pan-African program, and its modalities of citizenship, this dissertation contradicts literature that portrays African leaders as misguided political-economic theorists, ideologically inconsistent, or ignorant Marxist-Leninists. Rather, I argue that Nkrumah and Ghana’s postcolonial government actively formed new political economic ideologies by drawing from Lenin’s state-capitalist framework and the Soviet Economic Policy (NEP) to reconcile capitalist policies under a decolonial socialist umbrella. Moreover, I investigate how ordinary Africans—the working poor, party members, local and cabinet-level government officials, economic planners, and the informal sector—grappled with ii and reshaped the state’s role and duty to its citizens, conceptions of race, Ghana’s place within the Cold War, state-capitalism, and the functions of state-corporations. Consequently, The Red Star State attends both to the intricacies of local politics while tracing how global ideas and conceptions of socialism, citizenship, governmentality, capitalism, and decolonization impacted the first independent sub-Saharan African state. -
Pan-African History: Political Figures from Africa and The
Pan-African History Pan-Africanism, the perception by people of African origins and descent that they have interests in common, has been an important by-product of colonialism and the enslavement of African peoples by Europeans. Though it has taken a variety of forms over the two centuries of its fight for equality and against economic exploitation, commonality has been a unifying theme for many Black people, resulting for example in the Back-to-Africa movement in the United States but also in nationalist beliefs such as an African ‘supra-nation’. Pan-African History brings together Pan-Africanist thinkers and activists from the Anglophone and Francophone worlds of the past two hundred years. Included are well-known figures such as Malcolm X, W.E.B. Du Bois, Frantz Fanon, Kwame Nkrumah, and Martin Delany, and the authors’ original research on lesser-known figures such as Constance Cummings-John and Dusé Mohamed Ali reveals exciting new aspects of Pan-Africanism. Hakim Adi is Senior Lecturer in African and Black British History at Middlesex University, London. He is a founder member and currently Chair of the Black and Asian Studies Association and is the author of West Africans in Britain 1900–1960: Nationalism, Pan-Africanism and Communism (1998) and (with M. Sherwood) The 1945 Manchester Pan-African Congress Revisited (1995). Marika Sherwood is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London. She is a founder member and Secretary of the Black and Asian Studies Association; her most recent books are Claudia Jones: A Life in Exile (2000) and Kwame Nkrumah: The Years Abroad 1935–1947 (1996).