Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Garveyism: Difference between revisions

From ProleWiki, the proletarian encyclopedia
More languages
(Created page with "'''Garveyism''', which refers to the political aspirations, beliefs and actions of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, is one of the earliest fronts in Pan-African discourse which emphasized racial unity and empowerment among Negros and repatriation of Africans in the diaspora to a greater United States of Africa. The Garveyite push for African unity transcended religious, cultural a...")
Tag: Visual edit
 
m (Added categories)
Tag: Visual edit
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Garveyism''', which refers to the political aspirations, beliefs and actions of [[Marcus Garvey]] and the [[Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League]], is one of the earliest fronts in [[Pan-Africanism|Pan-African]] discourse which emphasized racial unity and empowerment among Negros and repatriation of Africans in the diaspora to a greater [[United States of Africa]]. The Garveyite push for African unity transcended religious, cultural and class barriers as it analyzed [[White supremacy]] as the primary existential threat to African people. Because of Garveyism's call to resist white power structures, the UNIA philosophy came to represent the more radical tendencies in black political thought, which directly opposed [[W.E.B Du Bois|W.E.B Du Bois's]] Talented Tenth and [[Booker T. Washington|Booker T. Washington's]] assimilationist positions. Although Garvey himself openly endorsed [[state capitalism]] as the solution to the problems of laisse faire finances, alongside his denunciation of White Marxists and the [[Socialist Party of America]] for their settler-colonial stances, there continued to exist socialist tendencies of Garveyite thought who worked and operated within the UNIA and its high offices. These circles within Garvey's thought were strengthened by his analysis on poverty, in which he recognizes the relationship between poverty and petty theft and denounces mass inequality.
{{Message box/Stub}}
 
'''Garveyism''', which refers to the political aspirations, beliefs and actions of [[Marcus Garvey]] and the [[Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League]], is one of the earliest fronts in [[Pan-Africanism|Pan-African]] discourse which emphasized racial unity and empowerment among Negros and repatriation of Africans in the diaspora to a greater [[United States of Africa]]. The Garveyite push for African unity transcended religious, cultural and class barriers as it analyzed [[White supremacy]] as the primary existential threat to African people. Because of Garveyism's call to resist white power structures, the UNIA philosophy came to represent the more radical tendencies in black political thought, which directly opposed [[W.E.B Du Bois|W.E.B Du Bois's]] Talented Tenth and [[Booker T. Washington|Booker T. Washington's]] assimilationist positions. Although Garvey himself openly endorsed [[state capitalism]] as the solution to the problems of laisse faire finances, alongside his denunciation of White [[Marxism|Marxists]] and the [[Socialist Party of America]] for their settler-colonial stances, there continued to exist socialist tendencies of Garveyite thought who worked and operated within the UNIA and its high offices. These circles within Garvey's thought were strengthened by his analysis on poverty, in which he recognizes the relationship between poverty and petty theft and denounces mass inequality.
[[Category:Black nationalism]]
[[Category:Garveyism| ]]
[[Category:Pan-Africanism]]

Latest revision as of 22:05, 25 October 2024

This article is a stub. You can help improve this article by editing it.

Garveyism, which refers to the political aspirations, beliefs and actions of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, is one of the earliest fronts in Pan-African discourse which emphasized racial unity and empowerment among Negros and repatriation of Africans in the diaspora to a greater United States of Africa. The Garveyite push for African unity transcended religious, cultural and class barriers as it analyzed White supremacy as the primary existential threat to African people. Because of Garveyism's call to resist white power structures, the UNIA philosophy came to represent the more radical tendencies in black political thought, which directly opposed W.E.B Du Bois's Talented Tenth and Booker T. Washington's assimilationist positions. Although Garvey himself openly endorsed state capitalism as the solution to the problems of laisse faire finances, alongside his denunciation of White Marxists and the Socialist Party of America for their settler-colonial stances, there continued to exist socialist tendencies of Garveyite thought who worked and operated within the UNIA and its high offices. These circles within Garvey's thought were strengthened by his analysis on poverty, in which he recognizes the relationship between poverty and petty theft and denounces mass inequality.