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The Golden Age of Black Nationalism, 1850-1925 (Paperback)
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The Golden Age of Black Nationalism, 1850-1925 (Paperback)
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The "golden age" of black nationalism began in response to the
passage of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 and extended to the time
of Marcus Garvey's imprisonment in 1925. During these seventy-five
years, an upsurge of back-to-Africa schemes stimulated a burst of
literary output and nurtured the growth of a tradition that
flourished until the end of the century. This tradition then
underwent a powerful revitalization with the rise of Marcus Garvey
and the ideological Pan-Africanism of W.E.B. Du Bois.
In this controversial volume, The Golden Age of Black Nationalism,
Wilson Jeremiah Moses argues that by adopting European and American
nationalist and separatist doctrines, black nationalism became,
ironically, a vehicle for the assimilationist values among black
American intellectuals. First providing the historical background
to black nationalism and Pan-Africanism, he then explores the
specific manifestations of the tradition in the intellectual and
institutional history of black Americans. He describes the work of
Alexander Crummell, W.E.B. Du Bois, Frederick Douglass, Booker T.
Washington--specifically challenging the traditional interpretation
of Washington as a betrayer of Douglass' vision--and the National
Association of Colored Women.
Moses also examines the tradition of genteel black nationalism in
literature, concentrating on the novels of Martin Delany and Sutton
Griggs, as well as the early poetry of W.E.B. Du Bois. Using
literary history instead of literary criticism, he identifies the
particularly Anglo-African qualities in these works. He concludes
with a description of those trends that led to the decline of
classical black nationalism at the time of the Harlem Renaissance
and the "New Negro Movement," which attempted to redefine the
cultural and spiritual goals of Afro-Americans. Offering both a
critical and sympathetic treatment of the black nationalist
movement in the United States, Moses' study will stimulate further
debate concerning the nature of the assimilationist tendencies
dominating black nationalist ideology in the "golden age."
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