
Contents
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“A Life Superior”: Pan African Nationalism and the Rise of the Cadre Model “A Life Superior”: Pan African Nationalism and the Rise of the Cadre Model
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“Masters of Our Own Space”: Amiri Baraka and the Congress of African People “Masters of Our Own Space”: Amiri Baraka and the Congress of African People
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“It Must Be Liberation That You Teach”: African Free School and the Reclamation of Newark “It Must Be Liberation That You Teach”: African Free School and the Reclamation of Newark
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“An Incorruptible Generation”: CAP Sites North and South “An Incorruptible Generation”: CAP Sites North and South
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“To Live Our Own Culture”: Africanization Versus Transformation “To Live Our Own Culture”: Africanization Versus Transformation
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“Submission Is Peace”: Bourgeois Nationalism and Patriarchy “Submission Is Peace”: Bourgeois Nationalism and Patriarchy
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“A Mystical Unity”: The Pitfalls of Infantile Pan Africanism “A Mystical Unity”: The Pitfalls of Infantile Pan Africanism
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“Strangers in a Strange Land”: Neo-Pan Africanism and the Quest for a Land Base “Strangers in a Strange Land”: Neo-Pan Africanism and the Quest for a Land Base
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“Return to the Source”: The Maturation of Pan African Nationalism “Return to the Source”: The Maturation of Pan African Nationalism
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“Preparing the Field”: The Transition to Left Pan Africanism “Preparing the Field”: The Transition to Left Pan Africanism
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5 The Maturation of Pan African Nationalism
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Published:March 2016
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Abstract
This chapter discusses the rise of Pan Africanism as a dominant ideology of the late 1960s. It examines the emergence of cadres of organizers as a framework for the practice of “Pan African nationalism,” the fusion of black nationalist and Pan Africanist politics. Many activists saw Pan African nationalism and the construction of independent black institutions as critical components of a new phase of struggle. The Congress of African People (CAP) was the main organizational expression of Pan African nationalism. This chapter profiles several Pan African nationalist schools associated with CAP. It explores the political contradictions of the quest for “Africanization,” critiquing the patriarchy and idealism of such campaigns. The chapter concludes with a discussion of Left Pan Africanism as an alternative to the essentialism of Racial Pan Africanism. The theories of West African revolutionary Amilcar Cabral and other international influences behind the shift to Left Pan Africanism are explored.
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