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Claude McKay
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in Black Internationalism, Print Culture, and Political Education in Claude McKay’s Banjo
> Radical History Review
Published: 01 October 2024
Figure 2. Photograph of Claude McKay taken for Home to Harlem promotion, ca. 1928. Harry Ransom Center Digital Archive, University of Texas, Austin.
More
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2024) 2024 (150): 53–79.
Published: 01 October 2024
...Figure 2. Photograph of Claude McKay taken for Home to Harlem promotion, ca. 1928. Harry Ransom Center Digital Archive, University of Texas, Austin. ...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2009) 2009 (103): 236–243.
Published: 01 January 2009
...Laura A. Harris Claude McKay, the canonically renowned Harlem Renaissance poet, has become a central subject in current sexuality, African diaspora, and postmodern Marxist studies. This review essay highlights the different contributions of four recent book-length studies specifically on McKay...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2003) 2003 (87): 169–182.
Published: 01 October 2003
... of the
modern twentieth century.
12-Stephens 9/16/03 12:32 PM Page 174
174 Radical History Review
In my current research project I use the writings of three black transnational
figures, Marcus Garvey, Claude McKay, and C. L. R. James...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2009) 2009 (103): 59–81.
Published: 01 January 2009
..., sexuality, and the physical exterior
as the expression of a new race consciousness,” one that was decidedly masculine,
militant, and antibourgeois. In describing the U.S. “Negro Problem” for Russian
readers in 1923, the Harlem Renaissance writer and leftist activist Claude McKay
acknowledged...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2003) 2003 (87): 242–243.
Published: 01 October 2003
...
at Mount Holyoke College. Her new book, Black Empire (forthcoming), explores the transat-
lantic dimensions of Marcus Garvey’s, Claude McKay’s, and C. L. R. James’s work in the
United States. She has also written on the revolutionary politics of Bob Marley as contrasted...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 203–205.
Published: 01 January 2001
... Aloft the Banner of Ethiopia: Caribbean Radicalism in Early Twentieth Century America
(1998); and A Fierce Hatred of Injustice: Claude McKay’s Jamaican Poetry of Rebellion (2000).
203
10-RHR 79 Contributors.nf.cs 11/22/00 12:40 PM Page 204
204...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2003) 2003 (85): 282–286.
Published: 01 January 2003
... and
writers, such as Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, and Langston Hughes, helped the
effort to publicize the horrors of lynching and to pass a federal antilynching bill. In
fact, the NAACP mounted an exhibit against lynching in New York in 1936. As the
movement against...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2009) 2009 (103): 1–5.
Published: 01 January 2009
... of the central figure of Claude McKay that complicate
the lenses of race and ethnicity with insights afforded by postcolonial, gendered, and
sexual analyses of his formation as a black diasporic political subject.
Many of the pieces already mentioned wrestle with and respond in their
own, case...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1989) 1989 (43): 136–144.
Published: 01 January 1989
... it their way. Not only would we be reading
about Guff ey readers, Cormick reapers, and the Kinley administra-
tion, but literature would lose something as well: Rod McKuen, for
example, not to mention Archibald McLeish, Carson McCullers,
Mary McCarthy, and Claude McKay. Machiavelli would be in some...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2018) 2018 (132): 144–171.
Published: 01 October 2018
....” 40. Corbould, “Streets, Sounds and Identity,” 865 . 41. Bureau of the Census, Fifteenth Census ; Sixteenth Census . 42. Ebony , “Man in the Ads.” 43. New York Amsterdam News , “Mute Tryst in Carnegie Hall.” 44. Holcomb, Claude McKay ; Knadler, “Sweetback...
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Journal Article
Radical History Review (2024) 2024 (150): 1–31.
Published: 01 October 2024
..., and analysis. Yet as Mae A. Miller-Likhethe suggests in this issue, the consciousness of the audience and the readership is largely absent from the scholarly record. In “Black Internationalism, Print Culture, and Political Education in Claude McKay’s Banjo ,” Miller-Likhethe asks us to interrogate...
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Journal Article
Radical History Review (2024) 2024 (150): 183–204.
Published: 01 October 2024
... in Claude McKay’s Banjo .” Radical History Review , no. 150 ( 2024 ): 53 – 79 . Mir Farina . “ Imperial Policy, Provincial Practices: Colonial Language Policy in Nineteenth-Century India .” Indian Economic and Social History Review 43 , no. 4 ( 2006 ): 395 – 428 . Morgenstern...
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Journal Article
Radical History Review (1993) 1993 (55): 113–132.
Published: 01 January 1993
...-was still
another departure for Huggins. Perhaps all of these departures, all
of this moving about structurally, was an attempt not to fall into
what he saw as the plight of many black writers, such as the poets
Countee Cullen and Claude McKay, each of whom was, in
Huggins’s words, “crippled...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 75–76.
Published: 01 January 2001
... Guevara, and perhaps above all by the work of Amilcar Cabral, George
Padmore, Claude McKay, and Walter Rodney. My encounter with Marx and Engels
at the age of about sixteen was a great epiphany, and I still regard their work as indis-
pensable to the understanding...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 77–80.
Published: 01 January 2001
... Guevara, and perhaps above all by the work of Amilcar Cabral, George
Padmore, Claude McKay, and Walter Rodney. My encounter with Marx and Engels
at the age of about sixteen was a great epiphany, and I still regard their work as indis-
pensable to the understanding...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 81–84.
Published: 01 January 2001
... Guevara, and perhaps above all by the work of Amilcar Cabral, George
Padmore, Claude McKay, and Walter Rodney. My encounter with Marx and Engels
at the age of about sixteen was a great epiphany, and I still regard their work as indis-
pensable to the understanding...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 85–86.
Published: 01 January 2001
... Guevara, and perhaps above all by the work of Amilcar Cabral, George
Padmore, Claude McKay, and Walter Rodney. My encounter with Marx and Engels
at the age of about sixteen was a great epiphany, and I still regard their work as indis-
pensable to the understanding...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 87–88.
Published: 01 January 2001
... Guevara, and perhaps above all by the work of Amilcar Cabral, George
Padmore, Claude McKay, and Walter Rodney. My encounter with Marx and Engels
at the age of about sixteen was a great epiphany, and I still regard their work as indis-
pensable to the understanding...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2001) 2001 (79): 89–91.
Published: 01 January 2001
... Guevara, and perhaps above all by the work of Amilcar Cabral, George
Padmore, Claude McKay, and Walter Rodney. My encounter with Marx and Engels
at the age of about sixteen was a great epiphany, and I still regard their work as indis-
pensable to the understanding...
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