Framing a radical African Atlantic: African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Leiden [u.a.]
Brill
2014
|
Schriftenreihe: | Studies in global social history
14 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | XVI, 752 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 9789004261631 |
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490 | 1 | |a Studies in global social history |v 14 | |
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adam_text | CONTENTS
List of Figures and Tables
........................................................................... xi
Abbreviations
.................................................................................................. xiii
Acknowledgements
....................................................................................... xv
Prologue
............................................................................................................
ι
L
Outlining the Plot: The Comintern and the African Atlantic
..... 5
2.
Reconstructing the ITUCNW Archives
......................................... 14
3.
Categorization and Assessment of the ITUCNW Material
..... 21
4.
Actors on Stage: Identifying Key Activists, their Networks
and their Whereabouts
...................................................................... 28
PART ONE
BANKOLE
1.
The Communist International and the Negro Question
............ 45
1.
The Contours of a Radical Cosmopolitan African
Atlantic World
..................................................................................... 46
2.
The Comintern, Anti-Colonialism and the Negro Theses
...... 54
2.
A Communist Agitator in West Africa?
............................................ 67
1.
The Making of an African Bolshevik
............................................ 68
2.
The
Münzenberg
Connection
......................................................... 75
2.1.
Drafting a Resolution on the Negro Question
.................. 83
2.2.
Approaching Casely Hayford and Kobina Sekyi
............... 86
2.3.
Meeting Mr. Richards
............................................................... 93
3.
Dreaming about a West African Workers Party and the
Realities of Political Activism
......................................................... 99
3.1.
Aborted Contacts: The WAFU and the LAI
....................... 103
3.2.
Moscow and West Africa
—
Promises and Pitfalls
........... 106
PART TWO
JAMES
3.
The Sixth Comintern Congress and the Negro Question
............ 111
1.
The Establishment of the Negro Bureau
...................................... 122
VÍ
CONTENTS
2.
The Establishment of the ITUCNW
............................................... 130
4.
Moscow
1929-1930:
The Negro Bureau, the (Provisional)
ITUCNW and the World Negro Workers Conference
................... 135
1.
Ford in Western Europe: Critical Reflections and Practical
Considerations
..................................................................................... 140
2.
The
1929
Manifesto of the Negro Bureau
.................................... 147
3.
The Negro Bureau and the British Communist Party
.............. 149
4.
The Negro Bureau, the LAI and the
Münzenberg-Network .... 151
5.
Focus Africa: Prospects and Difficulties
....................................... 176
6.
Organising Africans in Berlin
.......................................................... 182
7.
Further Criticism: The Lack of Emphasize in Colonial Work
.... 186
5.
Towards a Global Agenda: The ITUCNW and the World Negro
Workers Conference
................................................................................ 193
1.
Moscow
.................................................................................................. 197
2.
First Contacts with Africans
............................................................ 205
3.
Bleak Prospects in Berlin and London
......................................... 211
4.
Caribbean and West African Sojourns
......................................... 220
5.
Meanwhile in the USA
.................................................................... 226
6.
Instructions and Plan
В
..................................................................... 229
η.
London
—
Paris
—
-London
................................................................. 231
8.
Activating Plan B: Berlin to Organize the Conference
............ 239
9.
Hamburg, Eventually
....................................................................... 243
6.
From Hamburg to Moscow and via Berlin to Hamburg
.............. 251
1.
The Political Consequences of the Hamburg Conference
..... 252
2.
The Fifth
RILU
Congress and a New Focus for the ITUCNW
.... 267
3.
Meetings in Berlin and the Outlines of an African Agenda
..... 271
4.
Any Hopes for African Radical Activism in Western Europe?
.. 276
5.
Kouyaté,
the LAI and the Lack of Support to the DSLVN
..... 281
6.
The Establishment of the
RILU
Negro Bureau and the
Hamburg Secretariat
......................................................................... 285
PART THREE
GEORGE
7.
The ITUCNW in the
RILU-
and Cl-apparatus,
1930-1933 ............ 291
1.
Visions about a Black
International
............................................ 292
CONTENTS
VÌI
1.1.
A Truncated Radical African Atlantic?
................................ 294
1.2.
The End of the Black International
...................................... 298
1.3.
November
1931:
Exit Ford, Enter Padmore
......................... 298
1.4.
Frieda
Schiff—
more than
Padmore s
Secretary?
............. 305
2.
The Hamburg Secretariat within the RILU-apparatus
............ 312
2.1.
The
RILU
Negro Bureau
........................................................... 313
2.2.
The February and March
1931
RILU-Instructions
to Ford
........................................................................................... 317
2.3.
The June
1931
Reminder alias the
1931
July Resolution
...... 318
2.4.
A New Beginning: The October
1931
Resolution
.............. 320
2.5.
Further Corrections: The December
1932
Resolution
..... 322
2.6.
Who Pays Who: The Transfer of Money from Moscow
via Berlin to Hamburg
.............................................................. 323
2.7.
Controlling Propaganda
........................................................... 328
2.7.1.
The Pros and Cons of Publishing in England
........ 329
2.7.2.
The Untouchable Man: Max Ziese
............................ 334
2.7.3.
Controlling the Periphery: the
RILU
Negro Bureau
and the Hamburg Secretariat
................................................. 336
3.
The Link between the ITUCNW and the ISH
............................ 339
3.1.
Two Black Comrades in Hamburg
........................................ 341
3.1.1.
Ford: From Enthusiasm to Bitterness
....................... 341
3.1.2.
Padmore: From Frustration to Cooperation
........... 346
3.2.
Working Locally, Acting Globally
......................................... 349
3.2.1.
Contacting People, Establishing Cells
...................... 350
3.2.2.
The Africa Bar and the International Club
in Hamburg
....................................................................... 35^
3.2.3.
A Potential Connection? The Kroomen s Seamen
Club in Sierra Leone
...................................................... 354
3.2.4.
The Establishment of ISH-Subcommittees in the
African Atlantic
.......................................................................... 35^
3.3.
The
1932
World Conference of the ISH in Altona
............ 362
3.4.
Comrade Jones: An Agent Provocateur of the
ITUCNW—and the ISH?
.......................................................... 371
4·
Black Assistance to Red Aid
............................................................
380
4.1.
Connecting People: Enlisting Participants for IRH
Congresses
.................................................................................... 383
4.2.
Visions about IRH Sections in Africa
................................... 385
4.3.
The International Scottsboro Campaign
............................ 392
VIU
CONTENTS
5.
Brothers in Arms? The ITUCNW and the Miinzenberg-
network
......................................................................................... 397
5.1.
Wishful Thinking: The LAI Goes West Africa ?
............... 398
5.2.
Who Represents Whom? Ford in the Orbit of the
Münzenberg
Platforms
............................................................. 403
5.3.
The Negro Number of the AIZ
............................................... 407
5.4.
Towards a Fruitful Cooperation? Padmore, the
Münzenberg-Konzem
and the ISH
.................................... 411
5.5.
Students from Africa
................................................................. 419
5.5.1.
A Liberian
Comrade for Moscow
............................... 422
5.5.2.
Fishing Africans: Hamburg
—
Berlin
—
Moscow in
the Long Run
....................................................................
425
5.5.3.
Comrade Joken or the Long Way of the Transfer
of East Africans to Moscow
......................................... 429
5.5.4.
The Incredible Escape of Comrade Hamilton
....... 436
5.5.5.
A New Start: The Plan of an Active Engagement
by the ITUCNW
............................................................... 438
5.6.
Comrade Bile and the Fate of the DSLVN
.......................... 443
6.
Race or Class: Criticizing International Solidarity as Racial
Lip-Service
............................................................................................. 451
8.
The Radical African Atlantic,
1930-1933:
Writing Class,
Thinking Race
............................................................................................ 455
1.
The Establishment of a Radical African Atlantic Network
....... 456
2. 5000
Copies of the Proceedings
.................................................... 464
3.
The Padmore-net,
1931-1933 ........................................................... 469
3.1.
Our object is
...
to stimulate the revolutionary spirit
of the masses
.............................................................................. 470
3.1.1.
Dreaming of a Caribbean Sub-Committee in
New York
........................................................................... 471
3.1.2.
Reconnecting with Africa
............................................. 475
3.1.3.
We are simply at a loss to know what has
gone wrong
...................................................................... 478
3.1.4.
Our Committee appeals to the young men
of Africa
............................................................................ 481
3.2.
Impossible Connections: The Belgian and Portuguese
African colonies
.......................................................................... 483
4-
Reaching Out to West Africa
.......................................................... 490
4.1.
A Revolutionary in Gambia?
.................................................. 491
4.2.
The Problematic Sierra Leone Connection
........................ 498
4.3·
Setbacks and New Contacts in the Gold Coast
................ 507
CONTENTS
ІХ
4.4. Tours
Sincerely R.B.
Wuta-Ofeť
........................................... 516
4.5.
The Nigeria-Option: A Promising Start and
Disappointing End
..................................................................... 523
4.6.
Our Man in Lagos: I.T.A. Wallace-Johnson
........................ 529
4.7.
Establishing a Radical Cell in Liberia
.................................. 543
4.8.
The Rise and Fall of the West African Connection
......... 549
5.
The Global Link: The Negro Worker
............................................. 551
5.1.
From The Negro Worker to the International Negro
Workers Review ana Back
........................................................ 553
5.2.
The Negro Worker should be built into a popular
mass journal
............................................................................... 555
5.3.
Global Dissemination, African Participation?
................... 559
5.4.
The Negro Worker and the Activities of the Hamburg
Secretariat
............................................................................................. 564
6.
Thousands of New Connections : The Radical African
Atlantic in late
1932 ........................................................................... 566
PART FOUR
OTTO
9.
Mission Impossible? The Collapse and Rebirth of the Radical
Atlantic Network
...................................................................................... 573
1.
The End of Activities in Germany
................................................. 575
1.1.
Escape and Reorganization: From Berlin and Hamburg
to Copenhagen and Paris
......................................................... 576
1.2.
The Yellow Trunk
....................................................................... 578
1.3.
The International Committee for Mutual Aid to Negro
Workers
......................................................................................... 582
2.
Exit Padmore, Enter Huiswoud
..................................................... 586
2.1.
Still Existing: The Negro Worker
............................................ 587
2.2.
The Critique
................................................................................. 589
2.3.
The August
1933
Meeting in Paris
......................................... 597
2.4.
Au revoir ....................................................................................
600
3.
The Rebirth of the ITUCNW
............................................................ 610
3.1.
The Reorganization of Negro Work: New Structures
and Old Tactics
........................................................................... 612
3.2.
The Crusader News Office in Antwerp
................................ 618
3.3.
Yet Another New Beginning: Semi-Legal Existence in
Amsterdam
................................................................................... 629
3.4.
Copenhagen
—
Harlem: The Negro Worker Disguised
..... 633
X
CONTENTS
4.
Momentum Lost? Renegades, Radicals and the Abyssinian
Campaign
.............................................................................................. 641
10.
Our Comrades in West Africa
............................................................. 659
1.
The Rise and Fall of the Lagos Connection
.............................. 661
2.
The
Liberian
Cell
............................................................................... 664
3.
Calling the Toilers in the Gold Coast
.......................................... 673
4.
Collaborating with Comrade Wallace-Johnson
....................... 677
5.
Comrade Robert and the Activities in the Gold Coast
.......... 682
6.
Nevertheless, the high level of struggle developed in many
recent strikes in the African colonies must be noted
.............. 687
11.
Moscow s Final Call
—
and Yet Another New Start?
.................... 691
1.
The Never-Ending Reorganization of Negro Work
................. 694
2.
Envisioning a Radical African Atlantic International
............ 698
3.
A Redrafted Manifesto and an Aborted Conference
.............. 702
4.
Who and what is the ITUCNW remains for the Black
colonies almost as much as a mystery as ever
....................... 707
Postscript
.......................................................................................................... 717
Bibliography
.................................................................................................... 723
Index
.................................................................................................................. 739
In
Framing a Radical African Atlantic
Holger
Weiss presents a critical outline
and analysis of the Internationa] Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers
(ITUCNWj and the attempts by the (Tnmnuinist International (Comintern)
to establish an
anticolonia]
political platform in the Caribbean and Sub-
Sa
haran
Africa during the interwar period. It is the first presentation about the
organization and us activities, investigating the background and objectives,
the establishment and expansion of a radical African (black)
Atlantit
network
between
1930
and
1933,
the
ι
пчѕ
in
1933
when the organization was
relocateti
from Hamburg to Paris, the attempt to reactivate the network in I J34 and
1935
an*.! its final dissolution and liquidation
ш
1937-38.
Ι Κ
>]
(¡ER W
!
iss. Ph.D.
(1997,
Helsinki University), is Professor of genera]
history at Abo
Akademi
University in Finland. He has published widely ^n
African, global and
Atlantů luštiny,
including Between Accommodation
./í/í/
Revivalismi
Muslimy,
the State and Society in Ghana from the Precoioniai to the
/ ,·
t rolou
itti
I r.i
ι
f mnísi
ι
Oriental Society 2<>()X).
ISBN:
Í7K
W
(M
789004
S
I Ul>l
HS
IN
Cl.OlìAI
SOClAl I IISTORY.
ISSN:
1874-6705
br
і
H.com/sgsh
|
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era | Geschichte 1900-2000 |
era_facet | Geschichte 1900-2000 |
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geographic | Atlantischer Raum (DE-588)4206638-4 gnd |
geographic_facet | Atlantischer Raum |
id | DE-604.BV041733274 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T01:04:02Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789004261631 |
language | English |
lccn | 013035274 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-027180013 |
oclc_num | 884365789 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-11 |
physical | XVI, 752 S. Ill. |
publishDate | 2014 |
publishDateSearch | 2014 |
publishDateSort | 2014 |
publisher | Brill |
record_format | marc |
series | Studies in global social history |
series2 | Studies in global social history |
spelling | Weiss, Holger 1966- Verfasser (DE-588)173420583 aut Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers by Holger Weiss Leiden [u.a.] Brill 2014 XVI, 752 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Studies in global social history 14 International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers Communist International Geschichte 1900-2000 Geschichte Schwarze. USA Pan-Africanism History 20th century African Americans Social conditions 20th century Arbeiterbewegung (DE-588)4002581-0 gnd rswk-swf Internationale Kooperation (DE-588)4120503-0 gnd rswk-swf Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 gnd rswk-swf Atlantischer Raum (DE-588)4206638-4 gnd rswk-swf Atlantischer Raum (DE-588)4206638-4 g Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 s Arbeiterbewegung (DE-588)4002581-0 s Internationale Kooperation (DE-588)4120503-0 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-90-04-26168-6 Studies in global social history 14 (DE-604)BV035404432 14 Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027180013&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027180013&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Weiss, Holger 1966- Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers Studies in global social history International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers Communist International Geschichte Schwarze. USA Pan-Africanism History 20th century African Americans Social conditions 20th century Arbeiterbewegung (DE-588)4002581-0 gnd Internationale Kooperation (DE-588)4120503-0 gnd Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4002581-0 (DE-588)4120503-0 (DE-588)4116433-7 (DE-588)4206638-4 |
title | Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers |
title_auth | Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers |
title_exact_search | Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers |
title_full | Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers by Holger Weiss |
title_fullStr | Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers by Holger Weiss |
title_full_unstemmed | Framing a radical African Atlantic African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers by Holger Weiss |
title_short | Framing a radical African Atlantic |
title_sort | framing a radical african atlantic african american agency west african intellectuals and the international trade union committee of negro workers |
title_sub | African American agency, West African intellectuals and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers |
topic | International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers Communist International Geschichte Schwarze. USA Pan-Africanism History 20th century African Americans Social conditions 20th century Arbeiterbewegung (DE-588)4002581-0 gnd Internationale Kooperation (DE-588)4120503-0 gnd Schwarze (DE-588)4116433-7 gnd |
topic_facet | International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers Communist International Geschichte Schwarze. USA Pan-Africanism History 20th century African Americans Social conditions 20th century Arbeiterbewegung Internationale Kooperation Schwarze Atlantischer Raum |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027180013&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027180013&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV035404432 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT weissholger framingaradicalafricanatlanticafricanamericanagencywestafricanintellectualsandtheinternationaltradeunioncommitteeofnegroworkers |