Brothers and strangers : Black Zion, Black slavery, 1914-1940

Bibliographic Information

Brothers and strangers : Black Zion, Black slavery, 1914-1940

Ibrahim Sundiata

Duke University Press, 2003

  • : pbk

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Includes bibliographical references (p. [407]-427) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Unprecedented in scope and detail, Brothers and Strangers is a vivid history of how the mythic Africa of the black American imagination ran into the realities of Africa the place. In the 1920s, Marcus Garvey-convinced that freedom from oppression was not possible for blacks in the Americas-led the last great African American emigrationist movement. His U.S.-based Universal Negro Improvement Association worked with the Liberian government to create a homeland for African Americans. Ibrahim Sundiata explores the paradox at the core of this project: Liberia, the chosen destination, was itself racked by class and ethnic divisions and-like other nations in colonial Africa-marred by labor abuse.In an account based on extensive archival research, including work in the Liberian National Archives, Sundiata explains how Garvey's plan collapsed when faced with opposition from the Liberian elite, opposition that belied his vision of a unified Black World. In 1930 the League of Nations investigated labor conditions and, damningly, the United States, land of lynching and Jim Crow, accused Liberia of promoting "conditions analogous to slavery." Subsequently various plans were put forward for a League Mandate or an American administration to put down slavery and "modernize" the country. Threatened with a loss of its independence, the Liberian government turned to its "brothers beyond the sea" for support. A varied group of white and black anti-imperialists, among them W. E. B. Du Bois, took up the country's cause. In revealing the struggle of conscience that bedeviled many in the black world in the past, Sundiata casts light on a human rights predicament which, he points out, continues in twenty-first-century African nations as disparate as Sudan, Mauritania, and the Ivory Coast.

Table of Contents

List of Illustration ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction 1 1. Confronting the Motherland 11 2. The Black Zion 48 3. Abuse 79 4. Investigation of an Investigation 97 5. Dollar Diplomacy 140 6. A New Deal for Liberia 170 7. Enterprise in Black and White 211 8. The Literary Mirror 229 9. The "Native Problem" 252 10. Fascism and New Zions 286 11. Postscript: Africa and Human Rights 325 Notes 341 Select Bibliography 407 Index 429

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