Front cover image for Reevaluating the Pan-Africanism of W.E.B. DuBois and Marcus Garvey : escapist fantasy or relevant reality

Reevaluating the Pan-Africanism of W.E.B. DuBois and Marcus Garvey : escapist fantasy or relevant reality

Print Book, English, 2006
Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston, N.Y., 2006
History
316 pages cm.
9780773459540, 0773459545
1006177170
Foreword by Molefi Kete Asantei
Prefacev
Acknowledgmentsvii
PAN AFRICANISM
CHAPTER I Pan-Africanism as Sub-Africanity in the United States, by Rhett Jones
1(22)
CHAPTER II Aime Cesaire, Leopold Senghor, and the Concept of Black Aesthetics, by Larry Ross
23(18)
CHAPTER III A "Second Emancipation": The Transfiguration of Garvey's "Racial Empire" in Rastafarian Thought, by Gregory Stephens
41(44)
W.E.B. DUBOIS
CHAPTER IV The 1959 Campaign of W.E.B. Du Bois for the United States Senate, by Philip Grant
85(12)
CHAPTER V A Juxtaposition of W.E.B. Du Bois and Marcus Garvey Within the Context of Feminism and Black Womanhood, by LaVonne Roberts Jackson
97(12)
CHAPTER VI Pan-Africanism and the Black Caucus, by Tanya Price
109(14)
CHAPTER VII W.E.B. Du Bois as Pan-African Critic and Critique of Postcolonialism, by Reiland Rabaka
123(34)
MARCUS MOSIAH GARVEY
CHAPTER VIII Marcus Garvey and His Belizian Impact, by James Chambers
157(16)
CHAPTER IX The Legacy of Pan African Social Thought as a Source and Means of Empowerment: Social Welfare in Black Communities in Britain, by Mekada Graham
173(22)
CHAPTER X Social Justice Versus Social Equality; The Capitalistic Jurisprudence of Marcus Garvey, by Otis B. Grant
195(12)
AFRICAN HISTORIOGRAPHY
CHAPTER XI Pan Africanism, African American Historiography, and Afrocentricity: A Critical Review of Ideology and Historical Thought, by James L. Conyers Jr.
207(22)
CHAPTER XII Politico-Cultural Paradigms of Pan Afrikanist Struggle: A Critical Exploration of Issues in Old World and New World Pan Afrikanism in Light of Traditional and Westernized Afrikan Approaches to Identity and Nation-Building, by Ahati N.N. Toure
229(28)
CHAPTER XIII From Dahomey to Haiti: The Vodun Paradigm as a Manifestation of Pan-Africanism, by Akinyele Umoja
257(18)
CHAPTER XIV Huey P. Newton on Pan-Africanism, by Judson L. Jeffries
275(16)
Bibliography291(8)
Index299