The race for America [electronic resource] : Black internationalism in the age of Manifest Destiny / R. J. Boutelle.
2023
E185
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Title
The race for America [electronic resource] : Black internationalism in the age of Manifest Destiny / R. J. Boutelle.
ISBN
9781469679563 (electronic bk.)
1469679566 (electronic bk.)
9781469676623
1469676621
9781469676630
146967663X
9781469676647
1469676648
1469679566 (electronic bk.)
9781469676623
1469676621
9781469676630
146967663X
9781469676647
1469676648
Published
Chapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, [2023]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource
Call Number
E185
Dewey Decimal Classification
970.004/96
Summary
As Manifest Destiny took hold in the national consciousness, what did it mean for African Americans who were excluded from its ambitions for an expanding American empire that would shepherd the Western Hemisphere into a new era of civilization and prosperity? R. J. Boutelle explores how Black intellectuals like Daniel Peterson, James McCune Smith, Mary Ann Shadd, Henry Bibb, and Martin Delany engaged this cultural mythology to theorize and practice Black internationalism. He uncovers how their strategies for challenging Manifest Destiny's white nationalist ideology and expansionist political agenda constituted a form of disidentification-a deconstructing and reassembling of this discourse that marshals Black experiences as racialized subjects to imagine novel geopolitical mythologies and projects to compete with Manifest Destiny. Employing Black internationalist, hemispheric, and diasporic frameworks to examine the emigrationist and solidarity projects that African Americans proposed as alternatives to Manifest Destiny, Boutelle attends to sites integral to US aspirations of hemispheric dominion: Liberia, Nicaragua, Canada, and Cuba. In doing so, Boutelle offers a searing history of how internalized fantasies of American exceptionalism burdened the Black geopolitical imagination that encouraged settler-colonial and imperialist projects in the Americas and West Africa.
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Print version: 146967663X
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Table of Contents
Self-fashioning citizenship in the colonizationist renaissance
Ethnology, empire and a Central American Communipaw
Restaging gender in the Black borderlands of Canada West
Diaspora literacy and the "Africanization" of Cuba
From Manifest Destiny to MAGA.
Ethnology, empire and a Central American Communipaw
Restaging gender in the Black borderlands of Canada West
Diaspora literacy and the "Africanization" of Cuba
From Manifest Destiny to MAGA.