W. E. B. Du Bois is arguably the most important Black intellectual
of the twentieth century and among the most important intellectual
figures in modern African social thought. One of the founders of
Pan-Africanism and a key figure in the postwar African liberation
movement, he was champion of Africa and its people throughout his
life. Despite this fact, his work on Africa has been
underemphasized in scholarly writing about him. This book brings
together for the first time Du Bois's writings on Africa from the
beginning of the twentieth century to his death in the early 1960s.
Including over 50 magazine and journal articles, poems and book
chapters, the works included in this volume clearly show not only
Du Bois's genius as a writer, but his profound understanding of how
the quest for racial equality involved all of the people of African
origin who suffered under colonial rule in Africa and in the Black
disapora. The editors include a historical introduction, headnotes
and a bibliography of Du Bois's work on Africa.
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