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African American Intellectual History Society

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Women

Pan-Africanism

Young Malcolm X in Roxbury, MA with Ella Collins. Source: Wikipedia.

Women’s Leadership in the Organization of Afro-American Unity

October 27, 2016October 28, 2016 Garrett Felber #WomenandPanAfricanismSeries, Malcolm X, Pan-Africanism

*This is the sixth post in a new blog series on Women, Gender and Pan-Africanism edited by Keisha N. Blain.

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Women, Gender Politics, and Pan-Africanism: An Interview with Keisha N. Blain

October 17, 2016February 7, 2017 Kathryn Vaggalis #WomenandPanAfricanismSeries, black nationalism, Pan-Africanism

In today’s guest post, Kathryn Vaggalis, the managing editor of Women, Gender and Families interviews Keisha N. Blain about the

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Erna Brodber and Pan-Africanism in Post-Independence Jamaica

October 12, 2016October 12, 2016 Petal Samuel #WomenandPanAfricanismSeries, Jamaica, Pan-Africanism

*This is the fifth post in a new blog series on Women, Gender and Pan-Africanism edited by Keisha N. Blain.

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Announcement: AAIHS Online Roundtable on Cedric Robinson’s Black Marxism

October 9, 2016December 30, 2016 AAIHS Editors #AAIHSRoundtable, black intellectual history, black internationalism, black politics, Pan-Africanism

November 7-12, 2016 The African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS) is hosting an online roundtable on Cedric Robinson’s Black Marxism:

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Beyond Négritude: Francophone African Women’s Pan-Africanism

October 1, 2016March 13, 2017 Annette Joseph-Gabriel #WomenandPanAfricanismSeries, Black women, Pan-Africanism

*This is the fourth post in a new blog series on Women, Gender and Pan-Africanism edited by Keisha N. Blain.

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