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Black liberation : a comparative history of Black ideologies in the United States and South Africa PDF

401 Pages·1996·30.28 MB·English
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Black Liberation This page intentionally left blank BLACK LIBERATION A Comparative History of Black Ideologies in the United States and South Africa George M. Fredrickson OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS New York Oxford Oxford University Press Oxford New York Athens Auckland Bangkok Bogota Bombay Buenos Aires Calcutta Cape Town Dar es Salaam Delhi Florence Hong Kong Istanbul Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madras Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi Paris Singapore Taipei Tokyo Toronto and associated companies in Berlin Ibadan Copyright © 1995 by George M, Fredrickson First published in 1995 by Oxford University Press, Inc., 198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 First issued as an Oxford University Press paperback, 1996 Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Fredrickson, George M., 1934- Black liberation : a comparative history of Black ideologies in the United States and South Africa / George M. Fredrickson. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBNO-19-505749-X ISBN 0-19-510978-3 (Pbk.) 1. Civil rights movements—United States—History. 2. Civil rights movements—South Africa— History. 3. Afro-Americans— Politics and government. 4. United States—Race relations. 5. Blacks—South Africa—Politics and government. 6. South Africa—Race relations. 7. Pan-Africanism—History. 8. Black nationalism—United States —History. 9. Black nationalism—South Africa—History. I. Title. E185.61.F836 a1995 973'.0496073—dc20 94-37504 2468 10 9 7 5 31 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper For Lynne, Peter, and Sean This page intentionally left blank Acknowledgments The research, writing, and editing that made this book possible could not have been accomplished without the generous help of many people and institutions. The principal research was done in the following repositories: the Stanford University Library, especially the library of the Hoover Insti- tution; the Rhodes and Bodleian libraries of the University of Oxford; in South Africa, the libraries of the Universities of the Witwatersrand, Cape Town, Durban-Westville, and South Africa (UNISA); and the Harvard University Library. I hope that the many librarians and curators who rendered me special service will forgive me for not mentioning each of them. In my zeal to get at the documents they provided, I often—and inexcusably—failed to note their names. I can, however, name two schol- ars who assisted my research in a direct and exceptional way: Louis Har- lan and Robert Edgar provided me with primary materials from their own files that turned out to be of enormous value. I also received help in locating sources from Thomas F. Jackson and Ian Solomon. Intensive work on this project began in 1988-89 when I was Harms- worth Professor of American History at Oxford. Dr. Stanley Trapido of- fered me the hospitality of his seminar in South African History and Poli- tics, and I had the rare opportunity of presenting my preliminary findings to four successive meetings of the seminar. The feedback that I received from Stan Trapido and the other members of this distinguished group of South Africanists was invaluable. I would also like to thank Professor Shula Marks of the School of Oriental and African Studies at the Univer- sity of London for inviting me to present a paper describing my project to her seminar and for the useful criticism that I received on that occasion. During my research trip to South Africa in the spring of 1989,1 benefited from the hospitality and advice of several South African scholars, espe- cially Bruce Murray, Charles van Onselen, Tim Couzens, and Philip Bon- viii Acknowledgments ner of the University of the Witwatersrand; Christopher Saunders, Her- man Giliomee, David Welsh, Francis Wilson, and Helen Bradford of the University of Cape Town; and Colin Bundy of the University of the West- ern Cape. While in Cape Town, I learned much about the links between American and South African freedom struggles during an extended inter- view with Allan Boesak. On a subsequent visit to South Africa in the summer of 1992, I received input from Tom Lodge, Fatima Meer, Mewa Ramgobin, Greg Cuthbertson, and William Freund, among others. The manuscript was completed and revised while I was a fellow of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research at Harvard Uni- versity in 1993. I wish to thank the Institute and its director, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., for the financial support that enabled me to bring the work to fruition. The staff of the Du Bois Institute, especially its associate direc- tor, Randall Burkett, rendered me every possible day-to-day assistance, and I also learned a great deal from the weekly seminars that provided me and other fellows with a chance to present our work to a discerning and critical audience. Portions of the manuscript dealing with black religious nationalism were read by James Campbell, Randall Burkett, and Richard Newman, all of whom provided extensive and perceptive comments. A complete draft of the book benefited from the close scrutiny of Anthony Marx, Clayborne Carson, and Sterling Stuckey. I often, but not always, followed the advice of these highly valued friends and colleagues. Consequently, they deserve much of the credit for the strengths of the book but bear no responsibility for its shortcomings. Sheldon Meyer of Oxford University Press played his customary role as peerless editor, providing a full measure of the encouragement and friendly guidance that gives an author confidence and sense of direction. I would also like to thank Stephanie Sakson for a highly professional job of copy editing, and Andrew Albanese and Joellyn Ausanka for guiding the book through the press. Last but not least, my wife Helene deserves much credit for accepting gracefully the disruptions in our life that pursuit of this project entailed and for proofreading the text in its various incarna- tions, employing her acute sense of linguistic propriety to catch many errors. G.M.F. Contents Introduction 3 1. "Palladium of the People's Liberties": The Suffrage Question and the Origins of Black Protest 14 Black Voting in the Nineteenth Century; The Ballot in African-American Protest Thought, 1840-1905; The Cape Suffrage and the Origins of Black Protest Politics in South Africa; Suffrage Struggles: Connections and Comparisons 2. "Ethiopia Shall Stretch Forth Her Hands": Black Christianity and the Politics of Liberation 57 The Problem of Religion and Resistance; Ethiopianist Thought in the Nineteenth Century; Popular Ethiopianism and African-American Missions to Africa; Ethiopianism in South Africa; What Happened to American Ethiopianism? 3. Protest of "The Talented Tenth": Black Elites and the Rise of Segregation 94 The Making of Segregation; African-Americans Mobilize Against Segregation; The National Congress in Comparative Perspective; Resisting the High Tide of Segregation, 1913-1919 4. "Africa for the Africans": Pan-Africanism and Black Populism, 1918-1930 137 Working-Class Protest and Middle-Class Organizations, 1918-1921; Elite Pan-Africanism; Populist Pan-Africanism: The Garvey Movement; Black Populism in South Africa: Garveyism and the ICU; Two Black Populisms: Comparing the UNIA and the ICU

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