In the years during and after World War I the Pan-Africanist
Marcus Garvey led what has been called the largest international
mass movement of black people in the twentieth century. He and his
organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA),
built a steamship line, sponsored expeditions to Liberia, staged
annual international conventions, inspired many black business
enterprises, endorsed black political candidates, and fostered the
study of black history and culture.
Judith Stein has not written a conventional biography, though
Garvey is the central character. The book is more a study of
Garvey's ideology and appeal and of the UNIA and the social basis
of its support. Stein examines Garvey's movement in light of the
dialectic of race and class that shaped it. Whereas other
historians have depicted Garveyism variously as a back-to-Africa,
civil rights, or Black Power movement, Stein places Garvey and the
UNIA carefully in the context of the international black politics
and economics of the period. She analyzes the ways in which the
UNIA was a response to the social and political upheaval of world
War I and its aftermath. Garvey and other UNIA leaders were part of
an international elite of blacks who applauded the triumph of
capitalism, though they excoriated the new order's racial
discrimination, which denied people like themselves places of
prestige in it. Their response to exclusion from the mainstream
Western economic world was to construct black institutions modeled
on those of white elites. The Black Star Line, the UNIA's steamship
company, was just such a venture, and though Garvey's goal of
incorporating the black working class into his movement seemed
promising briefly after World War I, it ultimately failed. The
promise of Garveyism, supported by ideologies generated by the new
social movements of the 1920s, was undercut by UNIA leaders' doomed
effort to adapt a bourgeois mode of operation to a mass movement.
Garveyism was fatally flawed by the ultimate disjunction of its
elite methods and mass base.
In addition to her reevaluation of standard views of Garvey and
Garveyism, Stein sheds new light on her subject with her use of new
sources. Among the most interesting of these are her interviews
with surviving Garveyites and reports on Garvey by agent of the
federal government's intelligence organizations.
Judith Stein is the first historian both to take Garveyism
seriously and to treat it in its own right as a product of its own
time. The resulting study should be of great interest to anyone
interested in Garvey, his historical period, or the ways in which
his work and ideology still influence us today.
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