Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Foreword
-
Introduction: New Negroes Forging a New World -
1 “Brightest Africa” in theNew Negro Imagination -
2 Cuban Negrismo, Mexican Indigenismo: Contesting Neocolonialism in the New Negro Movement -
3 An International African Opinion: Amy Ashwood Garvey and C. L. R. James in Black Radical London -
4 The New Negro’s Brown Brother: Black American and Filipino Boxers and the “Rising Tide of Color” -
5 The New Negro of the Pacific: How African Americans Forged Solidarity with Japan -
6 “A Small Man in Big Spaces”: The New Negro, the Mestizo, andJean Toomer’s Southwest -
7 Making New Negroes in Cuba: Garveyism as a Transcultural Movement -
8 Reconfiguring the Roots and Routes of New Negro Activism: The Garvey Movement in New Orleans -
9 Black Modernist Women at the Parisian Crossroads -
10 A Mobilized Diaspora: The First World War and Black Soldiers as New Negroes -
11 Climbing the Hilltop: In Searchof a New Negro Womanhoodat Howard University -
12 New Negro Marriages and the Everyday Challenges of Upward Mobility -
13 “You Just Can’t Keep the Music Unless You Move with It”: The Great Migration and the Black Cultural Politics of Jazz in New Orleans and Chicago -
14 New Negroes at the Beach: At Work and Play outsidethe Black Metropolis -
15 “Home to Harlem” Again: Claude McKay and the Masculine Imaginary of Black Community -
16 Not Just a World Problem: Segregation, Police Brutality, and New Negro Politics in New York City -
17 The Conjunctural Field of New Negro Studies -
18 Underground to Harlem: Rumblings and Clickety-Clacks of Diaspora -
19 The Gendering of Place in the Great Escape - Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Index
(p.431) Contributors
(p.431) Contributors
- Source:
- Escape from New York
- Publisher:
- University of Minnesota Press
Minnesota Scholarship Online requires a subscription or purchase to access the full text of books within the service. Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter.
Please, subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian.
To troubleshoot, please check our FAQs, and if you can't find the answer there, please contact us.
- Title Pages
- Foreword
-
Introduction: New Negroes Forging a New World -
1 “Brightest Africa” in theNew Negro Imagination -
2 Cuban Negrismo, Mexican Indigenismo: Contesting Neocolonialism in the New Negro Movement -
3 An International African Opinion: Amy Ashwood Garvey and C. L. R. James in Black Radical London -
4 The New Negro’s Brown Brother: Black American and Filipino Boxers and the “Rising Tide of Color” -
5 The New Negro of the Pacific: How African Americans Forged Solidarity with Japan -
6 “A Small Man in Big Spaces”: The New Negro, the Mestizo, andJean Toomer’s Southwest -
7 Making New Negroes in Cuba: Garveyism as a Transcultural Movement -
8 Reconfiguring the Roots and Routes of New Negro Activism: The Garvey Movement in New Orleans -
9 Black Modernist Women at the Parisian Crossroads -
10 A Mobilized Diaspora: The First World War and Black Soldiers as New Negroes -
11 Climbing the Hilltop: In Searchof a New Negro Womanhoodat Howard University -
12 New Negro Marriages and the Everyday Challenges of Upward Mobility -
13 “You Just Can’t Keep the Music Unless You Move with It”: The Great Migration and the Black Cultural Politics of Jazz in New Orleans and Chicago -
14 New Negroes at the Beach: At Work and Play outsidethe Black Metropolis -
15 “Home to Harlem” Again: Claude McKay and the Masculine Imaginary of Black Community -
16 Not Just a World Problem: Segregation, Police Brutality, and New Negro Politics in New York City -
17 The Conjunctural Field of New Negro Studies -
18 Underground to Harlem: Rumblings and Clickety-Clacks of Diaspora -
19 The Gendering of Place in the Great Escape - Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Index