Black 1968

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African National Congress
Ahmed Sekou Toure
Amilcar Cabral
anti-colonial movements
Biafra
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CIA
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Global 1960s
global black resistance networks
Hastings Banda
Independence in Africa
Julius Nyerere
Kenneth Kaunda
Malcolm X
Martin Luther King Jr.
Michael Manley
pan-African ideology
protest song politics
race relations legislation
revolutionary cultural exchange
transnational black activism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032872650
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Feb 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Initially, the 1960s was a time of understandable optimism. The civil rights movement and the legislation it inspired suggested an end to institutionalized racism in the United States, while in the Global South, the emergence of independent states anticipated political liberation and increased prosperity. So, when racial discrimination, entrenched privilege, cold war politics, and fiscal reality dashed these hopes later in the decade, the world experienced a wave of protests. Conventional narratives of 1968 focus on student strikes, revolutions and coups, assassinations, and the reactionary backlash that they inspired.

The chapters of Black 1968 reveal the imperfectly documented and heretofore unrecognized bonds that led peoples of African descent around the world to articulate new global conceptions of Blackness as a way to mount local challenges to racism, segregation, colonialism, economic exploitation, generational authority, and cultural chauvinism.

This book will be of interest to general readers interested in the global 1968 as well as scholars of Blackness and global history.

Timothy H. Parsons is a social historian holding joint appoints in the departments of History and African and African American Studies at Washington University.