Black Awakening in Capitalist America: An Analytic HistoryMr. Allen discusses the relationship between the power elite and Black discontent. He finds very little difference between those motivations and methods which create and maintain colonialism abroad and those which prevent Black self-determination in the UNited States. Mr. Allen examines various programs designed by the power elite to absorb radicalism and encourages its cooperation with the capitalistic structure. He does not see Black capitalism, Negro organization man, foundation grants, business-managed welfare or token political victories as aiding Black liberation but as producing an atmosphere conducive to even more comprehensive exploitation. "The Third World, the underdeveloped world, exists just as surely within America as it does across the seas", concludes Mr. Allen. "In the dialectic between Black and white America, a preview of what may be in store for the world can be glimpsed." (Back cover). |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 8
Page
... Harold Cruse . Copyright © 1968 by Harold Cruse . Reprinted by permission of William Morrow and Company , Inc. NEW YORK URBAN COALITION INC . For excerpts from a report of the New York Urban Coalition's Economic Development Task Force ...
... Harold Cruse . Copyright © 1968 by Harold Cruse . Reprinted by permission of William Morrow and Company , Inc. NEW YORK URBAN COALITION INC . For excerpts from a report of the New York Urban Coalition's Economic Development Task Force ...
Page 5
... Harold Cruse wrote : " From the be- ginning , the American Negro has existed as a colonial being . His enslavement coincided with the colonial expansion of European powers and was nothing more or less than a condition of domestic ...
... Harold Cruse wrote : " From the be- ginning , the American Negro has existed as a colonial being . His enslavement coincided with the colonial expansion of European powers and was nothing more or less than a condition of domestic ...
Page 144
... Harold Cruse tried to avoid the pitfalls into which Jones and Karenga stumbled . Cruse was not a public figure at the Black Power Conference , but his writings have done much to shape nationalist thinking . Cruse himself is a black ...
... Harold Cruse tried to avoid the pitfalls into which Jones and Karenga stumbled . Cruse was not a public figure at the Black Power Conference , but his writings have done much to shape nationalist thinking . Cruse himself is a black ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Social Context of Black Power | 18 |
Black Nationalism | 75 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Black Awakening in Capitalist America: An Analytic History Robert L. Allen No preview available - 1990 |
Common terms and phrases
activities advocated Africa Afro-American alliance areas basic become black America black bourgeoisie black business black capitalism black community black liberation black middle class black militants black nationalism black nationalists Black Panther Black Panther party black power black student black workers bourgeoisie Bundy called Carmichael cities civil rights movement Coalition Communist conference CORE CORE's corporate Cruse Democratic dollars domestic colonialism DuBois economic efforts elite establishment ethnic group exploitation federal force Ford Foundation freedom ghetto Harlem Ibid income industrial Innis institutions integration intellectuals Karenga leaders leadership major Malcolm Malcolm X masses McKissick ment middle-class militant black Muslims NAACP native Negro neocolonialism Newark nonviolent oppression organization party percent police political power structure problem racial racism radical Rap Brown rebellion reform revolution revolutionary riots role Roy Innis SNCC social Stokely Carmichael struggle thousand tion United urban Vietnam violence white America York