AFRICANISM
Thumbnail | Title | Description |
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"African" vs "Black" | ||
"Africanism" under the microscope | ||
Africanisation | ||
Africanist News and Views |
Africanist News and Views, published by the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) of Azania (South Africa), expressed the Pan-Africanist viewpoint in the struggle for liberation. |
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Afro-American influences on the Black Conciousness Movement |
This paper gives an overview of the relationship and differences between Black Consciousness and the civil rights struggle by African Americans |
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Anatomy of an unknown quantity | ||
Anglo-American influences on the Black conciousness movement |
It was said by minions of the racist oppressive giant in South Africa that Black Conciousness was nothing but an importation of American Black power. African-Americanism was not only a struggle for power, but it was also a search for identity and the resugence of its cultural values. |
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Black Consciousness and White Liberals | ||
City Press - mischief-maker | ||
Congress and the Africanists | ||
Draft position paper on the ideologies of Pan Africanism and Black Consciousness as they have developed in occupied Azania (ie South Africa) | ||
Editorial notes | ||
Editorial notes: Unity for South Africa | ||
Edward Wilmot Blyden |
A 19th century progenitor of Pan-Africanism and Negritude. |
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Indian Opinion Vol.57 No.11 Mar 1959 | ||
Message to the PAC on Sharpeville Day | ||
Negritude: a phase |
We in South Africa have for the last 300 years of oppression been engaged in a bloody struggle against white supremacy to assert our human, and not African, dignity. |
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Nigeria and tomorrow's Africa | ||
Our fundamental principles | ||
Our fundamental principles |