Marcus Garvey: A Controversial Figure in the History of Pan-Africanism (Report)
Journal of Pan African Studies 2008, March 15, 2, 3
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Publisher Description
Introduction Doing doctoral research on the history of Jamaican popular music in the twentieth century, I study the life of singers, producers and other protagonists of that story. Thus, I recently took an interest in the life and theories of Marcus Garvey who has been perceived as a true prophet by most Rastafarians since the beginning of the Rasta movement in the early 1930's. For a great many people, especially in the Caribbean, Garvey is often depicted as the father of Pan-Africanism, a political doctrine and movement designed to unify and uplift African nations and the African Diaspora as a universal African community.
Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA): with Special Reference to the "Lost" Parade in Columbus, Ohio, September 25, 1923.
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