Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, Volume XI , livre ebook

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With Volume XI: The Caribbean Diaspora, 1910-1920, Duke University Press proudly assumes publication of the final volumes of The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers. This invaluable archival project documents the impact and spread of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), the organization founded by Marcus Garvey in 1914 and led by him until his death in 1940. Volume XI is the first to focus on the Caribbean, where the UNIA was represented by more than 170 divisions and chapters. Revealing the connections between the major African-American mass movement of the interwar era and the struggle of the Caribbean people for independence, this volume includes the letters, speeches, and writings of Caribbean Garveyites and their opponents, as well as documents and speeches by Garvey, newspaper articles, colonial correspondence and memoranda, and government investigative records. Volume XI covers the period from 1911, when a controversy was ignited in Limon, Costa Rica, in response to a letter that Garvey sent to the Limon Times, until 1920, when workers on the Panama Canal undertook a strike sponsored in part by the UNIA. The primary documents are extensively annotated, and the volume includes twenty-two critical commentaries on the territories covered in the book, from the Bahamas to Guatemala, and Haiti to Brazil. A trove of scholarly resources, Volume XI: The Caribbean Diaspora, 1910-1920 illuminates another chapter in the history of one the world's most important social movements.Praise for the Previous Volumes:"The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers will take its place among the most important records of the Afro-American experience. . . . 'The Marcus Garvey Papers' lays the groundwork for a long overdue reassessment of Marcus Garvey and the legacy of racial pride, nationalism and concern with Africa he bequeathed to today's black community."-Eric Foner, the New York Times Book Review"Until the publication of The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, many of the documents necessary for a full assessment of Garvey's thought or of his movement's significance have not been easily accessible. Robert A. Hill and his staff . . . have gathered over 30,000 documents from libraries and other sources in many countries. . . . The Garvey papers will reshape our understanding of the history of black nationalism and perhaps increase our understanding of contemporary black politics."-Clayborne Carson, the Nation"Now is our chance, through these important volumes, to finally begin to come to terms with the significance of Garvey's complex, fascinating career and the meaning of the movement he built."-Lawrence W. Levine, the New Republic
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Date de parution

15 juillet 2011

EAN13

9780822392729

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

8 Mo

THE MARCUS GARVEY AND UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION PAPERS
Caribbean Series
SPONSORED BY National Endowment for the Humanities National Historical Publications and Records Commission James S. Coleman African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles
SUPPORTED BY Ahmanson Foundation Ford Foundation Rockefeller Foundation UCLA Foundation
EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD
Fitzroy Baptiste† Richard Blackett O. Nigel Bolland Philippe Bourgois Bridget Brereton Patrick Bryan Ronald N. Harpelle Richard Hart Winston James Rupert Lewis Hollis R. Lynch Colin Palmer Stephan Palmié Brenda Gayle Plummer K. W. J. Post
iii
Hon. Marcus Garvey, D. S. O. E
THE MARCUS GARVEY AND UNIVERSAL NEGRO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION PAPERS
Volume XI The Caribbean Diaspora 1910–1920
Robert A. Hill, Editor in Chief John Dixon,Associate Editor Mariela Haro Rodríguez,Assistant Editor Anthony Yuen,Assistant Editor
D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y P R E S S Durham and London 2011
The preparation of this volume was made possible in part by grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, an independent federal agency, and the National Historical Publications and Records commission. Production of the volume has also been supported by grants from the Ahmanson Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the UCLA Foundation.
Duke University Press gratefully acknowledges the support of the Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC), which funds toward the production of this book.
National provided
Documents in this volume from the Public Record Office are © British Crown copyright material and are published by permission of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office.
The volume was designed by Linda M. Robertson and set in Galliard and Stempel Garamond type. Photographs and illustrations were digitized using a Xerox DocuImage 620s scanner and an Epson Perfection 1650 scanner.
Copyright © 2011 Duke University Press.
CataloginginPublication data on file with the Library of Congress.
ISBN 9780822346906
Printed in the United States of America on acidfree paper
DEDICATEDTO THEPEOPLEOFTHECARIBBEAN
As one who knows the people well, I make no apology for prophesying that there will soon be a turning point in the history of the West Indies; and that the people who inhabit that portion of the Western Hemisphere will be the instruments of uniting a scattered race who, before the close of many centuries, will found an Empire on which the sun shall shine as ceaselessly as it shines on the Empire of the North to day.
viii
MARCUSGARVEY October 1913
It is the duty of West Indians of light and leading who are domiciled in foreign countries to lead in the demand for a West Indian renaissance. They should not be satisfied with mere assertions of loyalty to any particular country, for they owe a higher loyalty to the islands where they were born. Therefore we suggest that men and women get together now, even as Irish, CzechoSlovaks, Alsatians, Poles and Hindoos have done, and begin to formulate plans for the betterment of their respective islands. This is not the time to be laggards; it is the time to be up and doing. WEST INDIANS, WAKE UP!
“RECONSTRUCTIONINTHEWESTINDIESNegro World, ca. 1 March 1919
ix
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