UID:
almafu_9959230570402883
Format:
1 online resource (288 p.)
ISBN:
0-8130-3953-3
,
0-8130-4019-1
Series Statement:
New world diasporas
Content:
'From Douglass to Duvalier' examines the creative and critical ways U.S. African Americans and Haitians engaged the idealized tenets of Pan Americanism - mutual cooperation, egalitarianism, and nonintervention between nation-states - in order to strengthen Haiti's social, economic, and political growth and stability.
Note:
Description based upon print version of record.
,
"The spirit of the age-- establish[es] a sentiment of universal brotherhood": Haiti, "Santo Domingo" and Frederick Douglass at the intersection of the United States and Black Pan Americanism -- "To combine the training of the head and the hands": the 1930 Robert R. Moton Education Commission in Haiti -- "We cast in our lot with the policy of good neighborliness": Claude Barnett, Haiti and the business of race -- "What happens in Haiti has repercussions which far transcend Haiti itself": Walter White, Haiti and the public relations campaign, 1947-1955 -- "To carry the dance of the people beyond": Jean-Leon Destine, Lavinia Williams and Danse Folklorique Haitienne -- "The moody republic and the men in her life": Francois Duvalier, U.S. African Americans and Haitian exiles, 1957-1964.
,
English
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-8130-3763-8
Additional Edition:
ISBN 0-8130-3472-8
Language:
English
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