Strategy for a Black Agenda. A Critique of New Theories of Liberation in the United States and Africa

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  • New York: International Publishers, 1973
By Winston, Henry
New York: International Publishers, 1973. First Edition. Very good. First edition (published simultaneously in cloth and in wraps); 8 x 5 1/2; pp. [8], 11-323; glossy, pictorial wraps in yellow and brown, illustrated with portrait of the author on back wrap; a tiny nick to upper corner of front wrap; several small spots to top edge of text block; mild wear and a few small creases to edges; overall in very good condition. An expansion of Henry Winston's (1911 - 1986) earlier Pan-Africanism work, it was published a year after his "Strategy for a Black Agenda." Winston was an African-American, Marxist civil rights activist, political figure, and early member of the American Communist Party. Left permanently blind after being denied medical treatment, while incarcerated for his Communist activities, he would be remembered as an ardent advocate of African-American civil rights, decades before the thought of racial equality would become mainstream.

Details

Title

Strategy for a Black Agenda. A Critique of New Theories of Liberation in the United States and Africa

Author

Winston, Henry

Condition

Very Good

Publisher

International Publishers: New York

Date

1973

Edition

First Edition


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