From worker-brc-news@lists.tao.ca Tue Mar 13 08:18:00 2001
From: Art McGee <amcgee@igc.org>
Subject: [BRC-NEWS] BOOK: Black Americans and Anticolonialism
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Date: Mon, 12 Mar 2001 22:38:59 -0500 (EST)
Scholars in recent years have begun reinterpreting the foundations and legacies of McCarthyism in the United States.(1) More work, however, remains to be done on the impact anticommunist fear and hysteria had on the developing black freedom struggle of the late 1940s and early 1950s. In Race Against Empire: Black Americans and Anticolonialism, 1937–1957, historian Penny M. Von Eschen contributes toward understanding the intersections among pan-Africanism, Afro-American politics, and the U.S. Cold War front during this period.
At the center of her narrative is the rise and fall of a broad
left-liberal coalition of black scholars, artists, journalists,
politicians and labor leaders. Many of them were aligned, with varying
degrees of closeness, to the Popular Front strategy of the American
Communist Party.(2) This coalition, she argues, cohered not only
around an anti-imperialist project, but also around the domestic fight
against U.S. racial apartheid. Articulating a politics of the
African diaspora,
it sought to redefine the individual and group
rights of Asians, continental Africans, and African descendants in the
Caribbean and the Americas—all within an international context
created by World War II and its immediate aftermath (p. 2).
According to the author, the guiding nucleus of this wartime black
political front in the United States was the International Committee
on African Affairs, later renamed the Council on African Affairs
(CAA). At its core were Communists and fellow travelers
like
W. Alphaeus Hunton, Max Yergan, W.E.B. and Shirley Graham DuBois, and
singer Paul Robeson. At its height, the council drew within its ranks
individuals like U.S. congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., New Dealer
Mary McLeod Bethune, and sociologist E. Franklin Frazier. As Von
Eschen suggests, the council was in no sense a Communist front, and
certainly, individuals' affiliations to the party did not
determine CAA activities, or split its membership along sectarian
lines. Until 1948,
she writes . . .most conflicts within
the CAA concerned the question of how to work effectively on
anticolonial issues — with those close to the CP often lining up
on different sides. (p. 20) Largely a fundraising entity, the CAA
provided the link between international anti-colonial networks, and
African liberation groups. Further, it lobbied the U.S. State
Department and United Nations for support in African decolonization,
and generated reports about the continent's economic landscape.
In documenting the CAA's activities and campaigns, Von Eschen argues that the shape of the postwar globe—far from being set in concrete—was in violent flux. Thus, pan-African activists and intellectuals had an open window of opportunity in which to successfully contest for the political, civil and economic rights of those struggling under the yoke of colonialism, and those oppressed as national minorities in the West. However, with the rapid crystallization of U.S. political, economic and military hegemony during the Harry Truman administration, radical black anti-colonialists found themselves increasingly repressed by the state, discarded by former allies, and in Von Eschen's view, driven to the sidelines of African-American political culture. Cold War liberal leadership, positioning itself as the sole paradigm in black politics, influenced the limited aspirations and strategies of the early Civil Rights Movement. This turn of events mirrored the marginalization, across the board, of left-leaning activists who gave momentum to the Popular Front.
Although the CAA's growth and development forms a centerpiece of the book, Von Eschen devotes considerable attention to the many long- and short-term conditions that influenced the form and content of a diasporan identity in the 1940s. This included, most fundamentally, the legacy of nineteenth-century pan-Africanism established by Martin Delany, Edward Blyden and Alexander Crummell. Against this backdrop, scholar W.E.B. DuBois played a powerful role in convening a series of Pan-African Congresses in 1900, 1919, 1921 and 1927. However, it was the Marcus Garvey movement that expanded pan-Africanism beyond a small elite and brought it within reach of a mass, working-class audience, though as Von Eschen convincingly argues, Garveyism itself embraced many of the ideals of Western imperialism. In contrast, the left internationalism of the 1920s and '30s (represented by individuals like C.L.R. James, then a Trotskyist, and George Padmore, a former Communist) helped infuse pan-Africanism with a militant anti-colonialism and anti-imperialism that later proved significant.
Like numerous scholars, Von Eschen views fascist Italy's invasion of Ethiopia in 1935 as a flashpoint in the history of pan-Africanism and African nationalism, giving rise to the formation of the International African Service Bureau, which later became the Pan-African Federation. Formed by a core of individuals that included Padmore, James, I.T.A. Wallace-Johnson, and Jomo Kenyatta (future leader of Kenya), the federation represented another pillar of pan-Africanism in the early twentieth century: the marriage of diasporan politics and labor militancy. This cross-fertilization not only influenced the character of the pivotal 1945 Pan-African Congress in Manchester, England (of which the Pan-African Federation was a chief architect), but also helped stimulate among politically engaged African Americans a strong emphasis on employment. Another key ingredient in the making of this diasporan community, according to the author, was the manner in which continental Africans studied abroad in the United States. Attending historically black schools like Lincoln University, and boarding in local black communities, people like Kwame Nkrumah were able to get a tangible sense of the commonalties among peoples of color.
For the author, it seems the most vital cohesive solidifying diasporan
consciousness and solidarity was the international black press.
Von Eschen argues that the Afro-American press, then at its apogee,
played a critical role in informing its black readership about strikes
across West Africa and the Caribbean during the late 1930s. More than
any other institution, she reveals, black newspapers heightened a
sense of familial unity with people on the other side of the
Atlantic—most of whom U.S. audiences would never meet, yet with
whom they still could imagine a connection. This was due in large part
to the existence of Claude Barnett's Associated Negro Press, a
syndicated news service that made international reporting widely
available to small papers
(p.8); it also had to do with the
regular contributions journalists like Padmore made to the Chicago
Defender, Pittsburgh Courier, and similar outlets.
Beyond her discussion of institutions and social phenomena, Von Eschen offers a clear sense of the centrality of several influential figures—DuBois, James, Padmore, and so forth—in advancing the pan-Africanist project. Throughout the text, their paths intersect frequently, and at dizzying angles. Further, she demonstrates how her various protagonists traversed the boundaries of labor, journalism, and the pan-Africanist movement. Nnamdi Azikiwe, who became the president of Nigeria, attended Howard University (where he met the ever-ubiquitous Padmore), and contributed articles to the Philadelphia Tribune and Baltimore Afro-American. Upon his return to West Africa, he encouraged Nkrumah and others to similarly pursue their studies at U.S. black institutions of higher education. Likewise, Henry Lee Moon, while a member of the Congress of Industrial Organization's Political Action Committee, was a newspaper journalist who, in Von Eschen's view, did much to familiarize black Americans with the struggles of African labor.
Hence, when the convulsions of the Second World War upset existing
power relations in the North, West and colonized South, intellectuals
and activists were in firm position to rally popular opinion around
visions of a more equitable world. Von Eschen is explicit in her
contention that the global dynamics
of World War II animated
pan-Africanist discourse (p. 7). Antifascism, which ostensibly
undergirded the Anglo-American-Soviet Grand Alliance,
lent
legitimacy to demands for democratic freedoms, and buttressed
anti-racist arguments. Still, many U.S. pan-Africanists found this
wartime antifascism lacking. While opposing Nazism, it left
imperialism untrammeled (for instance, the U.S. military presence in,
and economic penetration of, Liberia and the Caribbean), and
equivocated on the need to end colonialism and overturn the structures
of North American racism. From the perspective of such
pan-Africanists, fascism was but an aspect of the same imperialism of
which England, France and the United States all were guilty.
The CAA played a key role in formulating such analyses during the
1940s, much of it elaborated in written reports by Alphaeus
Hunton. This body of work, Von Eschen intimates, proceeded from a
framework anchored in political economy, and understood racism as a
phenomenon with historical origins in slavery and
capitalism. Surprisingly, Von Eschen asserts, such analyses gained
widespread currency in popular journals like the Crisis (published by
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, or
NAACP) and the Journal of Negro History, and even in conservative
black newspapers like the New York Amsterdam News. On another,
significant note, writes Von Eschen, 1940s anti-colonialism
represented a radical departure from the earlier gendered language of,
for example, Martin R. Delany's consistent masculinist positing
of Africa as the fatherland and pervasive invocations of the
motherland.
(p. 79) In its place rose a more universalist
notion of rights, presumably inherited from the left internationalism
of the 1930s. This paradigmatic shift not only upset gendered
political categories,
but also corresponded to the central
leadership roles of women like Bethune and Charlotta Bass.
Promising also were the development of the Atlantic Charter and United
Nations, both of which created international vehicles for redefining
the meanings of freedom and rights. In the fluid context of early
postwar multilateralism, activists employed a variety of international
strategies aimed consistently at raising issues of discrimination
and colonial representation,
and arguing for an economic
reconstruction in Africa along the lines of that proposed for
war-ravaged Europe. (p. 84) However, this race against empire
was derailed by a chain of events, including heightened tension
between the Soviet Union, and Britain and the United States; the
articulation of the Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan, both of
which asserted U.S. guardianship of the free world
against a
perceived communist threat; conservative backlash against the wave of
labor strikes in the late 1940s; and in the U.S., a growing
preoccupation with internal security,
and mounting repression
of dissenting voices. Public criticisms of U.S. policy abroad, once a
domain of black anti-colonial activists, became strictly off limits.
In this hostile climate, political elites were able to easily conflate civil rights issues with communism. Liberal activists like Powell and Bethune, and mainstream civil rights groups, pragmatically supplanted criticism of U.S. foreign policy with an exclusive focus on domestic discrimination. Seeking refuge in the burgeoning anticommunist consensus, political actors like the NAACP's Walter White contended that racial discrimination undermined the United States' justified battled against the Soviet Union. Similarly conceding the high ground to anticommunism, many CIO unions and most black newspapers jettisoned activists with real or imagined ties to the Communist Party, and journalists like Padmore whose militant anti- imperialism previously was in vogue. Parallel to this, coverage of African affairs declined precipitously. In an atmosphere of hysteria conditioned by the communist revolution in China, the Korean War, and the Alger Hiss and Rosenwald cases, the CAA soon found itself burdened with lawsuits filed by the Attorney General's Subversive Activities Control Board. Members like Hunton, DuBois and Robeson likewise found themselves imprisoned, harassed or barred from travel abroad. By 1955, its coffers empty, the CAA folded.
Von Eschen skillfully documents how this chain of events reverberated
through U.S. black political culture. Significantly, she writes,
one of the consequences of the later collapse of the politics of
the African diaspora was the reinscription of gender in discourses on
Africa and anti-colonialism and, arguably, within Pan-African
politics
— paving the way for a return to the old
masculinist discourses and renewed gender hierarchies. (p. 79) Black
civil rights and anti-colonial agitation became, in popular circles,
separate spheres. Racism, once tied to the workings of political
economy, was reconceptualized as a psychological, moral problem that
gave birth to slavery, instead of the other way around. Issues of
racial oppression, once internationalized, were confined to the
limited horizons of U.S. race relations.
Black identity in the United States similarly was reconfigured, as
even the black popular press encouraged audiences to think of
themselves as Americans
separate and distinct from the rest of
the diaspora. Von Eschen proffers that this Afro-American
exceptionalism
went hand in hand with a reinvigorated belief in
African primitiveness, a condition to be overcome through Western
tutelage and development schemes. Thus, the author contends that anti-
colonialism, while it persisted, changed dramatically in its core
assumptions. She implies that just as civil rights was separated from
anti-colonialism, anti-colonialism was itself severed from
anti-imperialism. The two, though related, were not the same.
The making of African Studies, though largely overlooked here, was no
less important to the climate of reaction Von Eschen highlights. An
emergent superpower, the United States sought to advance its knowledge
about the African continent. This was part of a larger schema for both
securing Africa's further integration into global capitalist
accumulation, and winning its peoples' allegiance against the
Soviet Union. In North America and Western Europe, the study of Africa
was effectively transformed as an enterprise. This transformation,
according to Michael West and William Martin, rested on a teaching
and research endeavor focused on sub-Saharan Africa; organized by
extra-disciplinary research programs; dominated by faculty and staff
at Historically White Universities (HWUs); and funded by ties to
private foundations and public agencies.
(3) Such changes
consolidated, on the one hand, a division of the continent between a
black
Africa in the south and a more Caucasian
Africa in
the north; on the other, a division between Africa as a focus of
study, and the rest of the diaspora.
The consequences of these shifts were numerous, and by no means
limited to North America. The work of Afro-American scholars like
DuBois and Hunton was severed from the field altogether. This
undoubtedly accompanied their growing marginalization within U.S. Cold
War politics. Also negated was the role of black colleges and
universities, publications, and institutions (like the Association for
the Study of Negro Life and History) as longtime reservoirs of African
scholarship. This allowed a new breed of white experts
the
space to claim paternity of the study of Africa. Thus, the creation of
Northwestern University's African Studies program in 1948, and the
formation of the African Studies Association in 1957, came to be
viewed as firsts
in the development of the field.
Second, the broad civilizational
questions raised by
pan-Africanist scholars in the United States and the Caribbean were
supplanted by calls for modernizing
and developing
a
backward Africa with no presumed past glory. Third, the making of
African Studies further disengaged study of the continent from any
notions of anti-colonial and anti-imperialist struggle. Fourth, the
separation of pan-Africanist themes and scholars from African Studies
meant that continental students traveling to North America did so
under the aegis of the State Department, white foundations, and white
universities. The interactions with African Americans, possible for
Azikiwe and Nkrumah, no longer had an institutional basis. Subverting
this aspect of pan-African community-building perhaps helped reinforce
the growing African/Afro-American estrangement the book discusses. At
the same time, many of the old colonial discourses about African
infancy and Western stewardship made their way intact into African
Studies as then conceived. This buttressed the widespread
exoticization of the continent that Von Eschen details.
However, the author views the 1950s as a period not merely of tragedy,
but also of continuity. She reveals that even as the CAA fell into
disrepute, new avenues opened for challenging the liberal
consensus
via the assertion of diasporic identity. These
alternative spaces included the 1955 Asian-African Conference in
Bandung, which challenged the legitimacy of a bipolar,
Soviet-U.S. world; the Nation of Islam, which advanced its own
anti-American critique of the Cold War
(p. 174); and the
goodwill ambassador
tours of Afro-American jazz musicians,
which subtly promoted pan-African solidarities despite State
Department sponsorship. For Von Eschen, it also seems clear that the
independence of Ghana in 1957 (and Nkrumah's All African
People's Conference in 1958) ushered in a new era of African
nationalism and diasporic solidarity, principally by giving
pan-Africanism the backing of state power.
By the mid-1960s, the internationalization of Afro-American civil rights, and an explicit critique of U.S. foreign relations, once again were in full bloom—thanks in part to the developing anti-imperialism of Malik El Hajj Shabazz (Malcolm X), the anti-Vietnam War stance of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and the revolutionary internationalism of organizations like the Black Panther Party. As Von Eschen illustrates, by 1967 even Martin Luther King, Jr., publicly declared his opposition to the war in Vietnam. In doing so, like activists in SNCC, he violated the taboo against civil rights leaders criticizing U.S. diplomacy.
In its scope, Von Eschen's book complements works like Gerald Horne's Black and Red: W.E.B. DuBois and the Afro-American Response to the Cold War, 1944-1963, and Bernard Makhosezwe Magubane's The Ties That Bind: African-American Consciousness of Africa. However, one might have expected from her book more attention to the specific political and economic struggles against racial apartheid in the United States. Similarly, her discussion of pan-Africanism's shifting, gendered subtext seems far too understated. Some scholars might rightly criticize Von Eschen for glossing over serious, deep-rooted antagonisms among left activists during this historical period, and failing to ground the book more in a discussion of the Popular Front period. Others may disagree about whether the potential truly existed for a genuine transformation of global power relations, even the immediate post-World War II moment. Yet, Von Eschen convincing demonstrates that history is rarely the story of the inevitable: The course of historical events may often appear linear and preordained to those reviewing them in the here and now, but arguing from this perspective results in reading the present backward into the past.
On the whole, Von Eschen paints a riveting portrait of a time when
radical anti-colonialism and domestic black civil rights marched arm
in arm, before weathering the challenges of the Truman and Eisenhower
years. In the process, she helps illuminate the origins of the
long-running primacy debate
among historians of the black slave
experience. The debate continues as to which preceded which: Racism or
slavery? Color prejudice or capitalism?
Race Against Empire is important finally for the immediacy of its
subject matter. As the twenty-first century begins, we now may be
witnessing another moment of disjuncture, one that has created renewed
possibilities for a radical politics of the diaspora.
For
instance, a number of African Americans, in criticizing U.S. economic
sanctions against Cuba, have rediscovered
a diasporan
connection to its people, a vast majority of whom are of African
descent. Several months ago, Randall Robinson, head of the
Washington, D.C. lobbying group TransAfrica, led a delegation to Cuba
as part of a public appeal to lift the blockade. Just as striking as
its campaign was the fact his group had a broad political and
ideological composition characteristic of 1940s-era
anti-colonialism. Among those accompanying Robinson were actor Danny
Glover, a vocal human rights activist; Johnnetta B. Cole, former
president of historically black Spelman College; and Bill Fletcher,
Jr., education director for the AFL-CIO, and national organizer for
the Black Radical Congress.
The goals of this mission dovetails with on-going calls to dissolve
the African debt, which a number of observers (including the late
Julius Nyerere) contend has been paid several times over. Along these
lines, vocal opposition to U.S. trade policy in Africa has put a new
generation of black activists in conflict not only with the Clinton
Administration, but also with the black professionals and managerial
elites operating within his New Democrat
alliance. Moreover,
now that the Cold War is over and Area Studies
are becoming
superfluous to the State Department and vulnerable to university
budget cuts, many scholars are exploring how to bring African Studies
to new constituencies. Or rather, they are examining how to return the
study of Africa to institutions, actors, and constituencies in black
community life—going back to the future,
as historian
Paul Tiyambe Zeleza terms it.(4) A reading of Von Eschen's book
reveals it is difficult to appreciate today's pregnant historical
moment without comprehending its origins in the contested political
terrain of the 1940s and '50s.
1. See, for instance, Ellen Schrecker, Many are the Crimes: McCarthyism in America (Boston: Little, Brown, 1998).
2. The Populist Front, codified by the Seventh Congress of the
Communist International (Comintern) in 1935, sought to defend
bourgeois democracy as a bulwark against the spread of fascism in
Europe. Hence, the Communist Party of the United States sought to
Americanize
its image, integrate itself more fully within
U.S. politics, and build mass-based antifascist alliances encompassing
mainstream and liberal forces. See Harvey Klehr, The Heyday of
American Communism: The Depression Decade (New York: Basic Books,
1984).
3. Michael O. West and William G. Martin, A Future with a Past:
Resurrecting the Study of Africa in the Post-Africanist Era,
Africa Today, Vol. 44, No. 3 (1997): 309.
4. Zeleza, The Perpetual Solitudes and Crises of African Studies in
the United States,
Africa Today, Vol. 44, No. 3 (1997): 205. See
also, Zeleza, Manufacturing African Studies and Crises (CODESRIA,
1997); William Martin and Michael West, The Decline of the
Africanists' Africa and the Rise of New Africas,
Issue,
Vol. 23, No. 1 (1995): 24-26; William G. Martin, Constructive
Engagement II, or Catching the Fourth Wave: Who and Where are the
`Constituents' for Africa?
The Black Scholar, Vol. 29, No. 1
(Spring 1999): 21-30; Gerald Horne, Looking Forward/Looking
Backward: The Black Constituency for Africa Past & Present,
The Black Scholar, Vol. 29, No. 1 (Spring 1999): 30-34; Lisa Brock,
Questioning the Diaspora: Hegemony, Black Intellectuals and Doing
International History from Below,
Issue, Vol. 24, No. 2 (1996):
9-11; Melina Pappademos, Romancing the Stone: Academe's
Illusive Template for African Diaspora Studies,
Issue, Vol. 24,
No. 2 (1996): 38-39; and Stanley J. Heginbotham, Rethinking
International Scholarship: The Challenge of Transition from the Cold
War Era,
Items (Social Science Research Council), Vol. 48,
Nos. 2-3 (June- September 1994): 33-40.