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Bücher der Reihe Black Critique

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  • - Communists in New York City, Mexico and the West Indies, 1919-1939
    von Margaret Stevens
    51,00 €

    A groundbreaking history of Communist organisations and struggle in the Caribbean, focusing on women, peasants of colour and black workers.

  • 11% sparen
    - The Political Philosophy of Malcolm X
    von Michael E. Sawyer
    25,00 - 141,00 €

    The first book on the political philosophy of this radical hero

  • - On Racial Capitalism, Black Internationalism, and Cultures of Resistance
    von Cedric J. Robinson
    48,00 €

    A collection of essays by one of the foremost scholars on the Black Radical Tradition

  • - Selected Writings of Andaiye
    von Andaiye
    51,00 - 142,00 €

    An inspiring collection from one of the Caribbean's most vital political figures.

  • - The 1968 Congress of Black Writers and the Making of Global Consciousness
     
    46,00 €

    A revolutionary collection of black radical thought from a historic event in 1968.

  • - The Life, Politics and Legacies of Thomas Sankara
     
    140,00 €

    Celebrating and critiquing the life of one of Africa's most important anti-imperialist leaders

  • - The 1968 Congress of Black Writers and the Making of Global Consciousness
     
    138,00 €

    A revolutionary collection of black radical thought from a historic event in 1968.

  • von Cedric J. Robinson
    120,00 €

    A major work on Marxism by one of the world's most influential black scholars

  • von Duse Mohamed Ali
    23,00 €

    'An outstanding contribution to literary Pan-Africanism' -- Rey Bowen, University of Chichester'A compelling addition to the canon of Pan-African creative writing from the 1930s. The editors show how Ali brought to life core themes of African American literature for readers in colonial Africa' -- Stephanie Newell, Professor, Yale University'Ali was a major force in early twentieth-century Pan-Africanism. The introductory material ... offers essential tools for today's readers to appreciate this extraordinary yet previously inaccessible novel' -- Dr. Leslie James, Queen Mary University of LondonEre Roosevelt Came is a short novel by early Pan-Africanist Duse Mohamed Ali. Originally serialized in Ali's Nigerian magazine The Comet in 1934, it grapples with the rise of global fascism and white supremacy, and the growing geopolitical influence of the USA in the interwar period.This is a fantastical, intricately woven and speculative story about how Black American airmen, organizing in secret, fight an international assemblage of white supremacists and Russian foreign agents bent on instigating a new world war. The narrative reveals how Black liberation struggles, Bolshevism, and the rise of so-called "colored" Japanese empires were bound together in the Pan-African literary imaginary.Written by a Sudanese-Egyptian, serialized in a West African magazine, and set in the USA, Ere Roosevelt Came is a Pan-African novel par excellence, and a fascinating historical document that conveys the complexities of Black internationalism in the interwar years. The novel is presented with two original, contextualizing essays and appendices featuring selected other writings to provide further insight into Ali's vision of a Pan-African future.Duse Mohamed Ali (1866-1945) was a playwright, historian, journalist, editor, and publisher. He inspired many Black nationalists, including a young Marcus Garvey, whom he mentored. Marina Bilbija is Assistant Professor of English at Wesleyan University, Connecticut. Alex Lubin is Professor of African American Studies at Penn State University, Pennsylvania. He is the author of several books.

  • von H L T Quan
    24,00 €

    'Phenomenal ... Offers us possibilities for rescuing the concept of democracy from its fatal entanglement with racial, heteropatriarchal capitalism'-Angela Y. Davis'Embraces the unruliness of collective struggle, and recognizes freedom not as a destination but practice-an abolitionist, feminist, anticapitalist, antiracist, radically inclusive practice'-Robin D.G. Kelley, author of Freedom Dreams'A compelling and inspiring book that belongs in our movements and our classrooms'-Chandra Talpade Mohanty, author of Feminism Without Borders'An elegantly written masterpiece'-Barbara Ransby, author of Making All Black Lives Matter Become Ungovernable is a provocative new work of political thought setting out to reclaim "freedom", "justice", and "democracy", revolutionary ideas that are all too often warped in the interests of capital and the state. Revealing the mirage of mainstream democratic thought and the false promises of liberal political ideologies, H.L.T. Quan offers an alternative approach: an abolition feminism drawing on a kaleidoscope of refusal praxes, and on a deep engagement with the Black Radical Tradition and queer analytics.With each chapter anchored by episodes from the long history of resistance and rebellions against tyranny, Quan calls for us to take up a feminist ethic of living rooted in the principles of radical inclusion, mutuality and friendship as part of the larger toolkit for confronting fascism, white supremacy, and the neoliberal labor regime.H.L.T. Quan is a political theorist, award-winning filmmaker and Associate Professor of Justice and Social Inquiry in the School of Social Transformation at Arizona State University. Quan is the author of Growth Against Democracy and editor of Cedric J. Robinson.

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