How Far the Promised Land?

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A. Philip Randolph
A01=Jonathan Rosenberg
Activism
African Americans
An American Dilemma
Angelo Herndon
Arnold Rampersad
Author_Jonathan Rosenberg
Axis powers
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Central Powers
Charles S. Johnson
Clayborne Carson
Colonialism
Color line (civil rights issue)
Counter-revolutionary
Decolonization
DeWitt Wallace
Emancipation Proclamation
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Europe first
Executive Order 8802
Floyd McKissick
Foreign Policy Association
George Padmore
George Schuyler
Herbert Aptheker
Ho Chi Minh
Howard University
Imperialism
James Forman
James S. Allen
John Haynes Holmes
John Hope Franklin
John Lewis Gaddis
Liberation Struggle
Malcolm X
Manifest destiny
March on Washington Movement
Marshall Plan
Massive resistance
Miller's Word
Moorfield Storey
Nat Turner
National Affairs
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
National interest
National Negro Congress
National Policy
Nationalist Movement
New Course
New Nation (United States)
New Negro
No taxation without representation
Oppression
Original position
Orval Faubus
Progressivism
Proscription
Racism
Rayford Logan
Reconstruction Era
Roy Cohn
Roy Wilkins
Saul K. Padover
Self-determination
St. Clair Drake
Voice of America
W. E. B. Du Bois
WEVD
What Happened
William Monroe Trotter
Works Progress Administration
World Affairs

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691007069
  • Weight: 624g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Oct 2005
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How Far the Promised Land? explores the relationship between overseas developments and the most important reform movement in modern American history, the struggle for racial justice. Interweaving civil rights history, U.S. foreign relations history, and twentieth-century international history, the book contributes to the emerging effort to reconceptualize the study of America's past by locating it in a global context. In examining the link between international developments and the quest for racial justice, Jonathan Rosenberg argues that civil rights leaders were profoundly interested in the world beyond America and incorporated their understanding of overseas matters into their reform program in order to fortify and legitimize the message they presented to their followers, the nation, and the international community. The book considers how a cosmopolitan group of black and white, male and female race reform leaders purposively deployed World War I and the peace settlement, the decolonization struggles in Africa and Asia, the emergence of communism and fascism, World War II, and the Cold War to help realize their domestic aspirations. Rosenberg sets this complex story against the backdrop of America's growing activism on the world stage, a development that would have significant positive implications for the domestic struggle. Central to the work is the notion that race reform leaders were animated by the idea of "color-conscious internationalism," a distinctive outlook that would affect the trajectory and momentum of the civil rights movement.
Jonathan Rosenberg is Assistant Professor of History at Hunter College of the City University of New York.