The Essential Writings of Robert A. Hill
The Essential Writings of Robert A. Hill
associate professor of African American studies
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Abstract
This volume brings together Robert A. Hill’s most important writings for the first time, highlighting his intellectual contributions to the history of pan-Africanism. A pioneering scholar and activist, a groundbreaking builder of pan-African archives, and the editor of the multivolume Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers, Hill remains underacknowledged for his influence on the field. This collection is a long-overdue testament to his legacy. Adam Ewing showcases Hill’s groundbreaking writings on Garveyism, the pan-African, anticolonial movement that spread across the globe following World War I. Hill’s essays trace Marcus Garvey’s evolving thought and illuminate the resonance of the movement in the Caribbean and its diaspora, in the United States, and across sub-Saharan Africa. The volume also includes Hill’s writings on diverse aspects of pan-Africanism, including the imposter figure in diaspora history, Cyril Briggs’s African Blood Brotherhood, the Rastafarian movement, the fiction of George Schuyler, George Beckford and the Abeng collective in Jamaica, the theories of Walter Rodney, the life and thought of C.L.R. James, and the music of Bob Marley. This volume not only demonstrates Hill’s intellectual praxis and its roots in his academic influences and personal experiences but also reveals the breadth, diversity, complexity, and centrality of the pan-African tradition in African diasporic politics and thought.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Making Dread History: Robert A. Hill and the Archive of Black Memory
Adam Ewing
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I On Garvey and Garveyism
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1
“Comradeship of the More Advanced Races”: Marcus Garvey and the Brotherhood Movement in Britain, 1913–1914
- 2 West Indians of the North: Garveyism in the Caribbean Diaspora, 1916–1923
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3
Horizons of Possibility: The Contours of African Garveyism, 1923–1940
- 4 Last Testament: Marcus Garvey’s The Black Man, 1933–1939
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1
“Comradeship of the More Advanced Races”: Marcus Garvey and the Brotherhood Movement in Britain, 1913–1914
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II Pan-Africanism in Theory and Practice
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5
King Menelik’s Nephew: Prince Thomas Mackarooroo, aka Prince Ludwig Menelek of Abyssinia
- 6 Racial and Radical: Cyril V. Briggs, the Crusader Magazine, and the African Blood Brotherhood, 1918–1922
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7
Dread History: Leonard P. Howell and Millenarian Visions in Early Rastafarian Religions in Jamaica
- 8 Ethiopian Stories: George S. Schuyler and Literary Pan-Africanism in the 1930s
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9
From New World to Abeng: George Beckford and the Horn of Black Power in Jamaica, 1968–1970
- 10 Walter Rodney and the Restatement of Pan-Africanism in Theory and Practice
- 11 C.L.R. James and the Vision of Emancipation: An Interview with Robert A. Hill
- 12 Redemption Works: From “African Redemption” to “Redemption Song”
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5
King Menelik’s Nephew: Prince Thomas Mackarooroo, aka Prince Ludwig Menelek of Abyssinia
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End Matter
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