American Africans in Ghana: Black Expatriates and the Civil Rights Era

Couverture
UNC Press Books, 30 déc. 2012 - 360 pages
In 1957 Ghana became one of the first sub-Saharan African nations to gain independence from colonial rule. Over the next decade, hundreds of African Americans--including Martin Luther King Jr., George Padmore, Malcolm X, Maya Angelou, Richard Wright, Pauli Murray, and Muhammad Ali--visited or settled in Ghana. Kevin K. Gaines explains what attracted these Americans to Ghana and how their new community was shaped by the convergence of the Cold War, the rise of the U.S. civil rights movement, and the decolonization of Africa.

Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana's president, posed a direct challenge to U.S. hegemony by promoting a vision of African liberation, continental unity, and West Indian federation. Although the number of African American expatriates in Ghana was small, in espousing a transnational American citizenship defined by solidarities with African peoples, these activists along with their allies in the United States waged a fundamental, if largely forgotten, struggle over the meaning and content of the cornerstone of American citizenship--the right to vote--conferred on African Americans by civil rights reform legislation.



 

Table des matières

Watching the World from Ghana
1
Black Modernity Subjecthood and Demands for Full Citizenship
27
Black Intellectuals and the Anticolonial Critique of Western Culture
52
Nkrumah the Expatriates and Postindependence Ghana 19571960
77
The Congo Crisis and an African American Womans Dilemma
110
Julian Mayfield and the Radical Afros
136
6 Malcolm X in Ghana
179
7 The Coup
210
Ways of Seeing Ways of Being
244
Memory and the Transnational Dimensions of African American Citizenship
274
Notes
287
Selected Bibliography
321
Index
331
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À propos de l'auteur (2012)

Kevin K. Gaines is director of the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies and professor of history at the University of Michigan. He is author of the award-winning Uplifting the Race: Black Leadership, Politics, and Culture during the Twentieth Century.

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