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E-raamat: Amy Jacques Garvey: Selected Writings from The Negro World, 1923-1928

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Jan-2024
  • Kirjastus: University of Tennessee Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781621902072
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Jan-2024
  • Kirjastus: University of Tennessee Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781621902072

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Amy Jacques Garvey was one of the most prolific women within any Black nationalist group, yet she has largely only been discussed in relationship to her husband, Black nationalist Marcus Garvey, and as the editor of the Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey. Much of her writing has remained unavailable to the public, lost to the archives, until now. Amy Jacques Garvey: Selected Writings from the Negro World, 19231928 seeks to fill this void by making her writings in the Negro World widely available for the first time.

Editor Louis J. Parascandola compiles a wide swath of Jacques Garveys work in this groundbreaking collection. Born and educated in Jamaica, Jacques Garveys atypical opportunity to receive education at elite Jamaican schools, along with her later jobs as a clerk and secretary, prepared her for future positions as journalist and political administrator. She also possessed the rhetorical skills and independent thinking that would help her challenge Marcus Garvey and the other men in Garveys organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League (UNIA). In allowing Jacques Garveys work to largely speak for itself, the volume reveals that she concerned herself with a diversity of important and often controversial political and social issues rather than the stereotypical domestic matters expected of most womans pages of the time period.

By examining her selected writings in the Negro World, this volume affords its readers a better understanding of Jacques Garveys powerful contribution not only to Garveyism but also to the growth of Black radical thought, anti-imperialist ideology, and the rights of third-world women. This timely study sheds new light on Jacques Garveys pivotal role as a Black female writer and thinker during the twenties.
Acknowledgments xi
A Note on the Text xiii
Introduction xv
Part 1: Early Writings
Interview/Editorial Reply
"10 Minutes with Mrs. Marcus Garvey," March 17, 1923
3(3)
"Mrs. Marcus Garvey Replies to Article in Negro World," July 21, 1923
6(2)
Sketches
"Whither Goest Thou?" March 31, 1923
8(3)
"Who Is to Be Blamed?" April 28, 1923
11(5)
Essays
"Tuskegee and Its Founder," Dec. 1, 1923
16(4)
"A Black Star," Dec. 8, 1923
20(3)
"Will the Negro be Re-Enslaved?" Dec. 15, 1923
23(5)
Travels
"On a Trip from Coast to Coast: Impressions of Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey, Wife of President-General on Vacation," Oct. 20—Nov. 24, 1923
28(26)
Part 2: Editorials For The Woman's Page
International Affairs/White Exploitation of Darker Peoples
"The New Premier of Egypt," Feb. 9, 1924
54(1)
"Black Emigration and White France," Sept. 27, 1924
55(2)
"Can Gandhi's Fasting Unite Moslems and Hindus?" Oct. 4, 1924
57(1)
"Why White Men Want Africa," April 18, 1925
58(2)
"The Tidal Wave of Oppressed Peoples Beats against the Color Line," July 18, 1925
60(2)
"The Cause of the Chinese Trouble," Sept. 5, 1925
62(1)
"Liberia, the Savior of American Rubber Manufacturers—At What Price?" Sept. 12, 1925
63(3)
"British Negroes in England Rated as Aliens—Why?" Jan. 30, 1926
66(2)
"Minerals and Raw Products Attract White Exploitation," Sept. ii, 1926
68(4)
Gender Issues
"The Larger Usefulness of Women," March 22, 1924
72(2)
"Our Women Getting into the Larger Life," July 12, 1924
74(2)
"Women and World Peace," Jan. 31, 1925
76(1)
"Women as Leaders Nationally and Racially," Oct. 24, 1925
77(2)
"Women's Function in Life," Dec. 19, 1925
79(2)
"For You and Your Sons," Nov. 13, 1926
81(2)
"Scanty Clothes Make Hardy Women," Nov. 27, 1926
83(1)
"Listen Women!" April 9, 1927
84(4)
Parenting/Children and Youths
"More Attention Given to Our Child Life," May 31, 1924
88(2)
"The Hand That Rocks the Cradle," July 5, 1924
90(2)
"The Duty of Parents to Children," May 2, 1925
92(1)
"Parents Should Learn to Understand Their Children," Oct. 2, 1926
93(1)
"A Strong Student Unit for the U.N.I.A.," April 3, 1927
94(3)
An Examination of the Race: Advice and Criticism "The Joy of Living," June 21, 1924
97(10)
"What Are You Doing with Your Money?" Jan. 3, 1925
99(1)
"He That Endureth to the End," Jan. 17, 1925
100(1)
"Away with Lip Service," Feb. 6, 1926
101(2)
"Moral Cowards," Feb. 13, 1926
103(1)
"Play Up, and Play the Game," Sept. 25, 1926
104(3)
Call for Contributors to the Woman's Page
"An Invitation to our Teachers and Student Women," June 7, 1924
107(1)
"Have a Heart," Aug. 2, 1924
108(1)
"Do Negro Women Want to Express Themselves?" April 11, 1925
109(1)
"How You Can Help," Feb. 13, 1926
110(1)
"Our Page Is Three Years Old," Feb. 12, 1927
111(2)
Religion
"Solving the Jewish Problem," March 1, 1924
113(1)
"Christianity the Best Solution of the World's Ills?" Aug. 16, 1924
114(1)
"Christian or Moslem Africa?" Nov. 15, 1924
115(2)
"Wanted—Missionaries for Africa," Feb. 21, 1925
117(1)
"New York Jews Raise over Six Million Dollars—What of Negroes?" June 5, 1926
118(2)
"Man's Inhumanity to Man," Jan. 8, 1927
120(2)
"Division Is the Scandal of Christendom," April 2, 1927
122(3)
Reading and Learning Business and Technical Skills "Enslave the Mind and You Enslave the Body," June 20, 1925
125(10)
"The Negro Race Needs Trained Men," July 3, 1926
127(2)
"What the World Needs You Should Produce," Sept. 4, 1926
129(2)
"Africa Needs Masters of Flivvers; Not Masters of Art," Oct. 23, 1926
131(2)
"Reading Is to the Brain What Food Is to the Muscles," Oct. 30, 1926
133(2)
Black Nationalism/African Redemption
"World Renaissance," March 8, 1924
135(3)
"White Prophecy Concerning Black Africa," Jan. 24, 1925
138(1)
"The Strong Must Rule, and the Weak Will Die, Policy of Imperialists," March 28, 1925
139(3)
"Wherefore a National Urge?" June 6, 1925
142(2)
"Has the Negro Served His Purpose in America?" Nov. 7, 1925
144(2)
"The Urge for Nationhood," May 1, 1926
146(1)
"Our Pledge to Africa," May 22, 1926
147(2)
"Africa Bides Her Time!" Feb. 5, 1927
149(1)
"Going to Africa?" April 16, 1927
150(3)
Garvey as a Leader While Imprisoned "Go Ye Into All the World and Preach the Gospel of Garveyism!" Feb. 14, 1925
153(10)
"Garvey in Prison but Garveyism at Large," Feb. 28, 1925
154(1)
"If Garvey Dies in Prison, What Then?" May 23, 1925
155(3)
"Imprison a Leader and You Boost His Cause," Aug. 15, 1925
158(2)
"Lest We Forget," Dec. 26, 1925
160(3)
Race Pride/Racial Propaganda
"White Idolatry in Movies," Sept. 20, 1924
163(1)
"Are We Proud of Our Black Skins and Curly Hair?" Aug. 1, 1925
164(3)
"Each Race Sees Beauty in Itself," May 8, 1926
167(2)
"I Am a Negro—and Beautiful," July 10, 1926
169(2)
"The Myth of Superior and Inferior Races," July 31, 1926
171(1)
"The High Cost of Propaganda," Aug. 14, 1926
172(2)
"Black Skin Is not an Accident, But Purpose of Creation," Jan. 22, 1927
174(2)
"Five Million Dollars for German Propaganda in 1927," March 5, 1927
176
Part 3: Post-Woman's Page Editorials
"What Makes a First-Class Nation?" May 28, 1927
182(1)
"A Dearth of Husbands," July 9, 1927
182(2)
"Mothers and Vacations," Aug. 20, 1927
184(2)
"The Future Control of Africa," Sept. 17, 1927
186(2)
"Experiments in Government," Sept. 24, 1927
188(3)
"Color-Baiting America," Oct. 29, 1927
191(1)
"Frenzied Attempts to Make Temperate Africa White," Nov. 26, 1927
192(6)
Part 4: Speeches
"Mrs. Amy Jacques Garvey in Telling Speech Points out Need for Sacrifice on Part of Each and Every Member," July 4, 1925
198(5)
"Mrs. Garvey Delivers Ringing Message to White Women of London at Great Meeting; Tells of Insults and Suffering," Sept. 22, 1928
203(3)
"Mrs. Amy Jacques-Garvey at Bermuda," Dec. 1, 1928
206(3)
Notes 209(22)
Works Cited 231(2)
Index 233