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The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, Vol. IV - September 1921-September 1922 (Hardcover)
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The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, Vol. IV - September 1921-September 1922 (Hardcover)
Series: The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, 4
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The fourth volume of the Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro
Improvement Association Papers marks the period of deepening crisis
in the UNIA's political and economic fortunes. After September of
1921, membership declined and morale in the UNIA began to weaken.
Underlying it all, however, was the final failure of the Black Star
Line that resulted when negotiations with the United States
Chipping Board for the purchase of the long proposed African ship
collapsed in March 1922. The movement also suffered a major setback
when the first Liberian colonization plan aborted in the summer of
1921. On the political front, Garvey's African program had to
compete with W.E.B. Du Bois's Second Pan-African Congress. The were
also major shifts in Garvey's political strategy during this
period, his speeches reflecting a desire to placate the U.S.
government, while simultaneously assailing his lef-wing critics for
promoting "social equality." This disavowal of radicalism earned
him further enemies on the left. One of his chief black critics,
Cyril V. Briggs, the leader of the African Blood Brotherhood,
unwittingly supplied federal investigators with evidence that led
to Garvey's indictment on charges of mail fraud in February 1922.
By prosecuting him, however, the Department of Justice did not
discredit Garvey in the eyes of his followers; rather, it
temporarily strengthened his hold over the movement as the
appearance of persecution intensified the loyalty of the UNIA
membership. But later in 1922 Garvey did lose favor among many of
his followers when it was disclosed that he had met secretly in
Atlanta with the Acting Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan. What
Garvey had thought was a diplomatic triumph proved instead to be
anathema to most blacks. At the Third UNIA Convention in 1922,
Garvey repudiated the entire executive council of the UNIA, while
expressing his anger of "plots" against him from within the UNIA
leadership. Loyalty to Garvey thus became a more urgent issue than
ever before. But although Garvey was once again able to silence his
critics within the UNIA, the price was to be a badly fractured and
demoralized movement. At the same time, his political adversaries
outside the UNIA were steadily gaining ground against him. As
meticulously documented as the three previous volumes, Volume IV
provides the first extended record of Garvey's emergent social
philosophy, particularly as it relates to his conception of "racial
purity" and the metaphysics of the human condition. It stands as an
impressive record of the Garvey movement.
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