African America and Haiti: Emigration and Black Nationalism in the Nineteenth CenturyWhile much has been written about the antebellum African American interest in emigration to Africa, the equally significant interest in Haitian emigration has been largely overlooked. Although free blacks spurned attempts by the American Colonization Society to return them to Africa, during the 1820s, and again during the 1850s and early 1860s, as conditions for African Americans became ever more precarious, thousands of blacks left the U.S. for Haiti searching for civic freedom and economic opportunity in the world's first independent black republic. Such prospects caught the attention of not only the African American leadership but of the black populace as well. In discussing the growing interest in Haitian emigration, Dixon provides ongoing discussions concerning black nationalism as an ideology. |
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... significant numbers of people across the Atlantic . A movement in the opposite direction had proved profitable for slave traders , but in the absence of a significant means of profiting from a movement back to Africa , the costs of ...
... significant in a number of ways . In the first instance , it was an obvious means of assuring African Americans that political conditions in Haiti were conducive to a successful emigration . Equally significant , Haiti's survival and ...
... significant figure , who served as a bridge between the African American activ- ism of the antebellum period , and black leaders of the twentieth century , such as W.E.B. Du Bois and Marcus Garvey . We can trace the post - emigrationist ...
Contents
Emigrationism Resurgent and | 61 |
Black Emigrationism 18541860 | 87 |
James Redpath and the Haitian Bureau of Emigration | 129 |
Copyright | |
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African America and Haiti: Emigration and Black Nationalism in the ... Chris Dixon No preview available - 2000 |