Brother's Keeper: The United States, Race, and Empire in the British Caribbean, 1937-1962Oxford University Press, 30/04/2008 - 264 من الصفحات In 1962, amidst the Cuban Revolution, Third World decolonization, and the African American freedom movement, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago became the first British West Indian colonies to gain independence. These were not only the first new nations in the western hemisphere in more than fifty years; they also won their independence without the bloodshed that marked so much of the decolonization struggle elsewhere. Jason Parker's international history of the peaceful transition in these islands analyzes the roles of the United States, Britain, the West Indies, and the transnational African diaspora in the process, from its 1930s stirrings to its Cold War culmination. Grounded in exhaustive research conducted in seven countries, Brother's Keeper offers an original rethinking of the relationship between the Cold War and Third World decolonization. |
المحتوى
Introduction | 3 |
1 The West Indian Watershed | 16 |
2 A More American Lake | 40 |
3 A Chill in the Tropics | 67 |
4 Building a Bulwark | 93 |
5 The American Lake or the Castro Caribbean? | 119 |
The Broken Bulwark | 140 |
Conclusion | 161 |
Notes | 171 |
Bibliography | 215 |
235 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
59 Lot Files AACC administration Affairs African-American American Anglo-American anticolonial anticommunist April areas base bauxite Britain British Caribbean British Guiana Bustamante Bustamante’s C. L. R. James Caribbean Caribbean Dependencies Castro Chaguaramas Classified Records Cold Cold War Colonial Office Colonial Secretary communist Consulate-Port of Spain crisis CWTP DDEL December decolonization Department diasporan Domingo economic Eisenhower empire Eric Williams expatriate FDRL February folder global Harlem hemisphere imperial independence Indian relations inter-American islands Jamaica Jamaica Governor January JFKL JFKP June Kennedy Kingston labor Latin America leaders London mainland Manley Papers Manley’s March Memorandum of Conversation military NAACP National national-security nationalist October officials political Port of Spain postwar Puerto Rico race racial reform regional Report RG 59 Lot Roosevelt self-government strategic Taussig Third World tion Trinidadian Truman U.S. consul U.S. Consulate-Kingston U.S. Consulate-Port U.S. policy UKNA United Washington West Indian West Indies Federation White Williams’s York