Read more
Scholarship on Black internationalism has experienced a revival. Whilst this scholarship has increasingly turned towards examining Du Bois's thoughts on the "color line" in a global rather than national context, none do so by centering his Ethiopian-centered perspective. This book provides an examination of Du Bois's efforts to link African Americans, Afro-Caribbean, and the Pan African project to Ethiopia as a response to the emerging question of Black historical identity.
For Du Bois, Ethiopia, Ethiopian history, and its monarchial leadership were essential to resolving the global problem of the "color line". He believed that Africans in the Diaspora, especially in the United States, and Africans across Ethiopia should build reciprocal relations with Ethiopia for the benefit of the Black Race and their mutual development. Du Bois also made multiple attempts to engage and establish relations with Ethiopia and worked through official and unofficial channels to develop those relations.
By revisiting and reevaluating Du Bois's engagement strategies with Ethiopia, the book suggests ways in which his evolving Pan-Africanism might be understood differently to how it has been deployed in scholarship on Black internationalism. The book provides new perspectives on Du Bois's famous invocation of the global "color line" by uncovering his conceptual and practical reasons for specifically connecting Ethiopia to African Americans and the issues of global social and economic justice.
List of contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Conceptualizing and Historicizing Du Bois's Early Life, Pan Africanism, and its Ethiopian Locality
Chapter 3. Situating Ethiopia as the Locality for Du Boisian Pan African Service: The Black Internationalist Locale
Chapter 4. Your Majesty's Obedient Servant: 1930 to 1934
Chapter 5. Pursuing and Maintaining the Black Internationalist Agenda amidst the Drumbeats of War
Chapter 6. Emperor Haile Selassie I on the Shores of America, 1954
Chapter 7. The Conclusion
Bibliography
Appendix. W. E. B. Du Bois Correspondence
About the Author
About the author
Ras Wayne Rose is an adjunct faculty in the department of history and philosophy at Jackson State University and a community fellow with Johns Hopkins University's Center for Social Concern. His research interest centers on African diaspora history with specific focus on W.E.B. Du Bois and Ethiopian and American relations.
Summary
This book uncovers W.E.B. Du Bois’s affinity for Ethiopia, identifies ways he served the cause of Ethiopia, and in recovering these intellectual and political links to the African continent provides a novel framing of his Black Internationalism and Pan-Africanism.