In the years during and after World War I the Pan-Africanist Marcus Garvey led what has been called the largest internat
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Pages [318] Year 1986
Table of contents :
Frontmatter
Acknowledgments (page xi)
Abbreviations (page xiii)
Introduction: The Problem of Garvey and Garveyism (page 1)
1 / Pan-Africanism Before Garvey (page 7)
2 / In Search of a Career Open to Talent: The Early Life of Marcus Garvey (page 24)
3 / Garvey and the Politics of Agitation (page 38)
4 / The Black Star Line: Business as Pan-African Politics (page 61)
5 / Black Ships, Black Workers: A Sea of Troubles (page 89)
6 / Garveyism in Africa: Improving Liberia (page 108)
7 / The Twenties: Political Poverty and Economic Progress (page 128)
8 / The UNIA Goes South: Garvey and the Ku Klux Klan (page 153)
9 / Violence as Racial Politics: The Murder of James Eason (page 171)
10 / The Politics of Fraud: J. Edgar Hoover versus Marcus Garvey (page 186)
11 / Africa Again: Garvey, Liberia, and the Firestone Rubber Company (page 209)
12 / Ethnic Politics as Pan-Africanism: The Locals of the UNIA (page 223)
13 / Garvey and Pan-Africanism: The Last Years (page 248)
Conclusion (page 273)
Note on Sources (page 281)
Unpublished Sources (page 283)
Index (page 285)
3 The World of Marcus Garvey
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