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Liberated Africans

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Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 7–23.
Published: 01 May 2014
... on the insights of Frantz Fanon and Amilcar Cabral, in particular, to anatomize the “failed liberation” of most African territories, including those in southern Africa, with their marked inability to better the lot of “the wretched of the earth” within their borders being readily apparent. Moreover, this has been...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2022) 2022 (144): 45–75.
Published: 01 October 2022
...Ndubueze L. Mbah Abstract This article recovers the Afropolitan histories of Liberated Africans by examining their mobility and freedom politics. Liberated Africans enacted Afropolitanism when they returned from Sierra Leone to Old Calabar and fashioned themselves into Black Englishmen...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2017) 2017 (127): 125–132.
Published: 01 January 2017
... in the United States. This essay addresses how technologies shape the conditions for the struggle between racisms and resistance against racial power. Technologies helped provide the mechanisms through which black liberation movements aimed to raise and transform people's consciousness about racism. African...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 53–71.
Published: 01 May 2014
...Teresa Barnes This article contributes to the fledgling literature on solidarity with individual African liberation struggles other than the South African antiapartheid movement by focusing on one of several connections made by the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) with radicals in the United...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2022) 2022 (144): 1–18.
Published: 01 October 2022
... for political effect. 23 Here, this question is addressed in differing historical and contemporary contexts. For example, Fretwell and Ndubueze Mbah reveal how consumption of cloth and/or European forms of dress buttressed the status of elites in Dahomey and returned Liberated Africans in Old Calabar, often...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2008) 2008 (101): 81–106.
Published: 01 May 2008
..., 1883 – 1950,” Journal of American History 86 (1999): 1045 – 77; Thomas Bender, Rethinking American History in a Global Age (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002). 15. Minkah Makalani, “For the Liberation of Black People Everywhere: The African Blood Brotherhood, Black...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 232–235.
Published: 01 May 2014
...Peter Limb Peter Limb reviews Robert Trent Vinson's The Americans Are Coming! Dreams of African American Liberation in Segregationist South Africa. Vinson Robert Trent , The Americans Are Coming! Dreams of African American Liberation in Segregationist South Africa . ( Athens : Ohio...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2009) 2009 (103): 117–130.
Published: 01 January 2009
...- to nineteenth-century Venezuelan national archival data regarding the declarations and discourses of runaway African maroons. García classified the evidence into passive and active marooning categories. The latter indicated a sustained politics and concept of anticolonial liberation. See Jesús...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2005) 2005 (91): 171–181.
Published: 01 January 2005
... towards Mao. There is no interview with Huey Newton, say, and no reference to theorists of black liberation/African revolution, even those pub- lished by Présence Africaine in Paris. The Black Panthers could have just as well been handing out copies of A Dying Colonialism by Frantz Fanon, the black Mar...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 72–93.
Published: 01 May 2014
... controversial public remarks on South Africa provide a crucial insight into how state repression shaped black transnational activism during the early Cold War. Faced with increased anticommunist harassment, many liberal African American activists distanced themselves from the black Left. Fearing...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2005) 2005 (92): 31–61.
Published: 01 May 2005
...: The Role of the Unity Movement in Liberation,” African Studies Library, University of Cape Town, Pamphlet Collection, March 1999. 66. Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Refl ections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso, 1983...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 1–5.
Published: 01 May 2014
.... For the history of liberation in southern Africa — colonialism’s last redoubt — was anything but provincial. John S. Saul, a central participant in the cosmopolitan African solidarity projects emanating from Canada, reminds us in his opening reflection that this particular struggle “marked the last major...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1998) 1998 (71): 19–27.
Published: 01 May 1998
... economics for women, was used to justify cutbacks in liberal arts education for African Americans. Now the response within the African-American community to the emergence of the black right was the rise of what could be termed the ”liberals.” The black liberals represented the tendency...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2002) 2002 (82): 110–130.
Published: 01 January 2002
... party rule, the formation of the Congress Alliance led by the African National Congress (ANC), and the drafting of the Freedom Charter, the liberation movement’s political blueprint for a nonracial society. In 1960, Legassick embarked for Balliol College, Oxford, as a Rhodes scholar. That same...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 161–177.
Published: 01 May 2014
..., liberation theology, liberal humanitarianism, Pan-­ Africanism, black power, and a vaguer sort of solidarity. There were internal contra- dictions and divisive questions on tactics, armed struggle, and sanctions and how to relate to racism in their own countries. The movement worldwide has been...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2007) 2007 (99): 80–106.
Published: 01 October 2007
... on with the argument that a new community was possible.29 Initially, however, the UCM conceived of this new community through the old lens of South African liberalism. Despite the presence of black members in the movement’s ranks, the conversation within it tended to be among well-meaning whites about how...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1990) 1990 (46-47): 189–211.
Published: 01 May 1990
... ”excrescence of ca italism,” its existence the bondage of forms of false consciousness.If Historically, the NEUM must therefore be recognized as a high- ly distinctive South African liberation organization which, while making its greatest popular mark in the politics of the 1940s and 1950~~has...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (1990) 1990 (46-47): 117–143.
Published: 01 May 1990
... was South Africa's first annaliste. Turning to English-language liberal history in the two decades after 1945, comparison with the counter-Progressives seems strik- ingly apposite. South African historians retreated from socio- U.S. AND SOUTH AFRICAN HISTORIOGRAPHY / 127...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2014) 2014 (119): 191–204.
Published: 01 May 2014
... means of expressing, as well as mobilizing, international solidarity with the South African liberation struggle. The motifs visualized apartheid as a system of injustice by depicting perpetrators and collaborators, victims and resistance fighters. They shared photographs of politi- cal prisoners...
Journal Article
Radical History Review (2019) 2019 (134): 96–115.
Published: 01 May 2019
..., authentic, and elected voice of black South Africans. 6 The ANC engaged in intensive work throughout the 1970s to build contacts with nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), churches, and unions, in order to access both funding and recognition, as did other regional liberation movements affiliated...