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Emancipation without Equality - Pan-African Activism and the Global Color Line (Paperback)
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Emancipation without Equality - Pan-African Activism and the Global Color Line (Paperback)
Series: African American Intellectual History
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At the Pan-African Conference in London in 1900, W. E. B. Du Bois
famously prophesied that the problem of the twentieth century would
be the global color line, the elevation of ""whiteness"" that
created a racially divided world. While Pan-Africanism recognized
the global nature of the color line in this period, Thomas E. Smith
argues that it also pushed against it, advocating for what Du Bois
called ""opportunities and privileges of modern civilization"" to
open up to people of all colors. Covering a period roughly
bookended by two international forums, the 1884-1885 Berlin
Conference and the 1911 Universal Races Congress, Emancipation
without Equality chronicles how activists of African descent fought
globally for equal treatment and access to rights associated with
post-emancipated citizenship. While Euro-American leaders created a
standard to guide the course of imperialism at the Berlin
Conference, the proceedings of the Universal Races Congress
demonstrated that Pan-Africanism had become a visible part of a
growing, global, anti-imperialist protest.
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