1.
Bogues, A.: Black heretics, black prophets: radical political intellectuals. Routledge, New York (2003).
2.
Marable, M., Mullings, L.: Let nobody turn us around: voices of resistance, reform, and renewal : an African American anthology. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md (2009).
3.
Hord, F.L., Lee, J.S.: I am because we are: readings in Black philosophy. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst (1995).
4.
Edwards, B.H.: The practice of diaspora: literature, translation, and the rise of Black internationalism. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA (2003).
5.
West, M.O., Martin, W.G., Wilkins, F.C.: From Toussaint to Tupac: the black international since the age of revolution. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (2009).
6.
Marable, M., Agard-Jones, V.: Transnational blackness: navigating the global color line. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2008).
7.
Fredrickson, G.M.: Black liberation: a comparative history of Black ideologies in the United States and South Africa. Oxford University Press, New York (1995).
8.
Gooding-Williams, R.: In the shadow of Du Bois: Afro-modern political thought in America. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2009).
9.
Gates, H.L.: Tradition and the Black Atlantic: critical theory in the African diaspora. BasicCivitas, New York (2010).
10.
Farred, G.: What’s my name?: Black vernacular intellectuals. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2003).
11.
Dubois, L., Scott, J.S.: Origins of the Black Atlantic. Routledge, New York (2010).
12.
Gilroy, P.: The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1993).
13.
Harris, J.E., African Diaspora Studies Institute: Global dimensions of the African diaspora. Howard University Press, Washington, D.C. (1993).
14.
Thompson, V.B.: The making of the African diaspora in the Americas, 1441-1900. Longman, Harlow (1987).
15.
Bonnett, A.W., Watson, G.L.: Emerging perspectives on the Black diaspora. University Press of America, Lanham (1990).
16.
Thompson, V.B.: Africa and unity: the evolution of Pan-Africanism. Humanities Press, [New York] (1969).
17.
Dawson, M.C.: Black visions: the roots of contemporary African-American political ideologies. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2001).
18.
Makalani, M.: In the cause of freedom: radical Black internationalism from Harlem to London, 1917-1939. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (2011).
19.
Moses, W.J.: Creative conflict in African American thought: Frederick Douglass, Alexander Crummell, Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois and Marcus Garvey. Cambridge Univeristy Press, Cambridge (2004).
20.
Simeon-Jones, K.: Literary and sociopolitical writings of the Black diaspora in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Lexington Books, Lanham, Md (2010).
21.
Rice, A.J.: Radical narratives of the Black Atlantic. Continuum, London (2003).
22.
Gomez, M.A.: Diasporic Africa: a reader. New York University Press, New York (2006).
23.
Griffith, G.A.: Blackness Unbound: Interrogating Transnational Blackness. Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 13, 1–3 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1215/02705346-2009-002.
24.
Stephens, M.: What Is This Black in Black Diaspora? Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 13, 26–38 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1215/02705346-2009-004.
25.
Torres-Saillant, S.: One and Divisible: Meditations on Global Blackness. Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 13, 4–25 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1215/02705346-2009-003.
26.
Luis-Brown, D.: Waves of decolonization: discourses of race and hemispheric citizenship in Cuba, Mexico, and the United States. Duke University Press, Durham, [N.C.] (2008).
27.
Back, L., Solomos, J.: Theories of race and racism: a reader. Routledge, London (2009).
28.
Brodber, E.: The continent of black consciousness: on the history of the African diaspora from slavery to the present day. New Beacon Books, London (2003).
29.
Geiss, I.: The pan-African movement. Methuen, London (1974).
30.
Robinson, C.J.: Black Marxism: the making of the black radical tradition. Zed, London (1983).
31.
Benn, D.: The Caribbean: an intellectual history, 1774-2003. Ian Randle, Kingston [Jamaica] (2004).
32.
Torres-Saillant, S.: An intellectual history of the Caribbean. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2006).
33.
Henry, P.: Caliban’s reason: introducing Afro-Caribbean philosophy. Routledge, New York (2000).
34.
Irele, A., Jeyifo, B.: The Oxford encyclopedia of African thought. Oxford University Press, New York (2010).
35.
Black Atlantic Resource Debate | An interactive resource promoting the study of black Atlantic cultures, https://blackatlanticresource.wordpress.com/.
36.
Black Cultural Archives, http://bcaheritage.org.uk/.
37.
AfroCubaWeb: the African cultures in Cuba - Yoruba - Congo - Dahomey - Abakwa - Haiti - West Indies - Bricamo, http://www.afrocubaweb.com/.
38.
Marxism and Anti-Imperialism in Africa, https://www.marxists.org/subject/africa/.
39.
Bogues, A.: Black heretics, black prophets: radical political intellectuals. Routledge, New York (2003).
40.
Gomez, Michael A.: Of Du Bois and Diaspora: The Challenge of African American Studies.
41.
Hord, F.L., Lee, J.S.: I am because we are: readings in Black philosophy. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst (1995).
42.
Farred, G.: What’s my name?: Black vernacular intellectuals. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2003).
43.
Gilroy, P.: The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1993).
44.
Shepperson, G.: Notes on Negro American Influences on the Emergence of African Nationalism. The Journal of African History. 1, (1960). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021853700001869.
45.
The Idea of a Black Radical Tradition. Small Axe.
46.
Sheffer, G.: Modern diasporas in international politics. St. Martin’s Press, New York (1986).
47.
ST. CLAIR DRAKE: THE BLACK DIASPORA IN PAN-AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE. The Black Scholar. 7, 2–13 (1975).
48.
Featherstone, D.: Solidarity: hidden histories and geographies of internationalism. Zed, London (2012).
49.
Hyslop, J.: Steamship Empire: Asian, African and British Sailors in the Merchant Marine c.1880--1945. Journal of Asian and African Studies. 44, 49–67 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1177/0021909608098676.
50.
Høgsbjerg, C.: Mariner, renegade & castaway: Chris Braithwaite : seamen’s organiser, socialist and militant Pan-Africanist. Redwords, London (2014).
51.
Du Bois, W.E.B., Zuckerman, P.: The social theory of W.E.B. Du Bois. Pine Forge Press, Thousand Oaks, Calif (2004).
52.
Zamir, S.: The Cambridge companion to W.E.B. Du Bois. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
53.
Du Bois, W.E.B., Sundquist, E.J.: The Oxford W.E.B. Du Bois reader. Oxford University Press, New York (1996).
54.
Du Bois, W.E.B., Foner, P.S.: W.E.B. Du Bois speaks: speeches and addresses, vol.1: 1890-1919. (1970).
55.
Young, A.A.: The souls of W.E.B. Du Bois. Paradigm Publishers, Boulder, Colo (2006).
56.
Lewis, D.L.: W.E.B. Du Bois: biography of a race, 1868-1919. H. Holt, New York (1993).
57.
Lewis, D.L.: W. E. B. Du Bois: the fight for equality and the American century, 1919-1963. H. Holt, New York (2000).
58.
Wolters, R.: Du Bois and his rivals. University of Missouri Press, Columbia (2002).
59.
DeMarco, J.P.: The social thought of W.E.B. DuBois. University Press of America, Lanham, MD (1983).
60.
Rudwick, E.M.: W.E.B. Du Bois: voice of the Black protest movement. University of Illinois Press, Urbana (1982).
61.
Marable, M.: W.E.B. Du Bois, Black radical democrat. Twayne, Boston (1986).
62.
Blum, E.J.: W.E.B. Du Bois, American prophet. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (2007).
63.
Rampersad, A.: The art and imagination of W.E.B. Du Bois. Schocken Books, New York (1990).
64.
Bass, A.: Those about him remained silent: the battle over W.E.B. Du Bois. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2009).
65.
M’bayo, T.E.: W. E. B. Du Bois, Marcus Garvey, and Pan-Africanism in Liberia, 1919-1924. The Historian. 66, 19–44 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0018-2370.2004.00062.x.
66.
Contee, C.G.: The Emergence of Du Bois as an African Nationalist. The Journal of Negro History. 54, (1969). https://doi.org/10.2307/2716161.
67.
Dennis, Rutledge Dennis, Rutledge (correspondence author): DuBois and the Role of the Educated Elite.
68.
Contee, C.G.: Du Bois, the NAACP, and the Pan-African Congress of 1919. The Journal of Negro History. 57, (1972). https://doi.org/10.2307/2717070.
69.
Kendhammer, B.: DuBois the pan-Africanist and the development of African nationalism. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 30, 51–71 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870601006538.
70.
William Gorman: W.E.B. Du Bois and His Work (May-June 1950), https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/fi/vol11/no03/gorman.htm.
71.
Adi, H., Sherwood, M., Padmore, G., Pan African Congress: The 1945 Manchester Pan-African Congress revisited. New Beacon Books, London (1995).
72.
Guterl, M.P.: The color of race in America, 1900-1940. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2001).
73.
Jonas, G.: Freedom’s sword: the NAACP and the struggle against racism in America, 1909-1969. Routledge, New York (2005).
74.
Verney, K., Sartain, L.: Long is the way and hard: one hundred years of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). University of Arkansas Press, Fayetteville [Ark.] (2009).
75.
Berg, M.: The ticket to freedom: the NAACP and the struggle for Black political integration. University Press of Florida, Gainesville (2005).
76.
Record, W.: Race and radicalism: the NAACP and the Communist Party in conflict. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y (1964).
77.
Martin Luther King on W.E.B. Du Bois - 1968 speech, http://links.org.au/node/3674.
78.
Garvey, M., Blaisdell, R.: Selected writings and speeches of Marcus Garvey. Dover Publications, Mineola, N.Y. (2004).
79.
- Marcus Garvey, http://marcusgarvey.com/.
80.
Fairclough, A.: Better day coming: Blacks and equality, 1890-2000. Penguin, New York (2002).
81.
Carnegie, C.V.: Postnationalism prefigured: Caribbean borderlands. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, N.J. (2002).
82.
Garvey, M., Garvey, A.J., Essien-Udom, E.U.: Philosophy and opinions of Marcus Garvey: or Africa for the Africans. Frank Cass, London (1967).
83.
Hill, R.A., Bair, B.: Marcus Garvey, life and lessons: a centennial companion to the Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association papers. University of California Press, Berkeley (1987).
84.
Clarke, J.H., Garvey, A.J.: Marcus Garvey and the vision of Africa. Vintage Books, New York (1974).
85.
Martin, T.: Race first: the ideological and organizational struggles of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association. Majority Press, Dover, Mass (1986).
86.
Lewis, R., Bryan, P.E.: Garvey, his work and impact. Africa World Press, Trenton, N.J. (1991).
87.
Langley, Jabez: Garveyism and African nationalism, http://ucl-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/display.do?tabs=detailsTab&ct=display&fn=search&doc=TN_proquest1036060112&indx=1&recIds=TN_proquest1036060112&recIdxs=0&elementId=0&renderMode=poppedOut&displayMode=full&frbrVersion=&frbg=&&dscnt=0&scp.scps=primo_central_multiple_fe&tb=t&mode=Basic&vid=UCL_VU1&srt=rank&tab=local&dum=true&vl(freeText0)=Garveyism%20and%20African%20nationalism&dstmp=1452609908817.
88.
Lewis, R., Lewis, M.W., International Seminar on Marcus Garvey: Garvey: Africa, Europe, the Americas. Africa World Press, Trenton, N.J. (1994).
89.
Beckles, H., Shepherd, V.: Caribbean freedom: society and economy from emancipation to the present. Randle, Kingston, Jamaica (1993).
90.
Geiss, I.: The pan-African movement. Methuen, London (1974).
91.
James, C.L.R.: A history of pan-African revolt. PM Press, Oakland, CA (2012).
92.
M’bayo, T.E.: W. E. B. Du Bois, Marcus Garvey, and Pan-Africanism in Liberia, 1919-1924. The Historian. 66, 19–44 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0018-2370.2004.00062.x.
93.
Fredrickson, G.M.: Black liberation: a comparative history of Black ideologies in the United States and South Africa. Oxford University Press, New York (1995).
94.
Lewis, R.: Marcus Garvey: the remapping of Africa and its diaspora. Critical Arts. 25, 473–483 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/02560046.2011.639956.
95.
Murrell, N.S., Spencer, W.D., McFarlane, A.A.: Chanting down Babylon: the Rastafari reader. Temple University Press, Philadelphia (1998).
96.
Benn, D.: The Caribbean: an intellectual history, 1774-2003. Ian Randle, Kingston [Jamaica] (2004).
97.
Maynard, John: ‘In the interests of our people’: the influence of Garveyism on the rise of Australian Aboriginal political activism.
98.
Marcus Garvey Foundation: New perspectives on the history of Marcus Garvey, the U.N.I.A., and the African diaspora. Marcus Garvey Foundation Publishers, Philadelphia, PA (2011).
99.
Mcleod, Marc: Garveyism in Cuba, 1920-1940.
100.
Marks, S., Trapido, S.: The Politics of race, class, and nationalism in twentieth-century South Africa. Longman, London (1987).
101.
James, W.: Holding aloft the banner of Ethiopia: Caribbean radicalism in early twentieth-century America. Verso, London (1998).
102.
Turner, J.M., Turner, W.B.: Caribbean crusaders and the Harlem Renaissance. University of Illinois Press, Urbana (2005).
103.
Harpelle, R.N.: Radicalism and accommodation: Garveyism in a United Fruit Company enclave. Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research. 6, 1–28 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1080/13260219.2000.10429576.
104.
Stein, J.: The world of Marcus Garvey: race and class in modern society. Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge (1986).
105.
Hill, R.A.: ‘Comradeship of the More Advanced Races’: Marcus Garvey and the Brotherhood Movement in Britain, 1913-14. Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 17, 50–70 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1215/07990537-1665434.
106.
Bandele, R.M.: Black star: African American activism in the international political economy. University of Illinois Press, Urbana (2008).
107.
Garvey, A.J.: Garvey and Garveyism. A. Jacques Garvey, Kingston, Jamaica (1963).
108.
Claudia Jones, An End to the Neglect of the Problems of Negro Women, https://blackfeministmind.wordpress.com/2009/03/16/session-3-black-feminist-west-indian-communist-on-claudia-jones/.
109.
Jones, C., Boyce Davies, C.: Claudia Jones: beyond containment : autobiographical reflections, essays and poems. Ayebia Clarke Pub, Banbury (2011).
110.
Boyce Davies, C.: Left of Karl Marx: the political life of Black Communist Claudia Jones. Duke University Press, Durham (2007).
111.
Jones, C., Boyce Davies, C.: Claudia Jones: beyond containment : autobiographical reflections, essays and poems. Ayebia Clarke Pub, Banbury (2011).
112.
Boyce Davies, C.: Left of Karl Marx: the political life of Black Communist Claudia Jones. Duke University Press, Durham (2007).
113.
Davies, C.B.: Sisters Outside: Tracing the Caribbean/Black Radical Intellectual Tradition. Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 13, 217–229 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1215/07990537-2008-017.
114.
Sherwood, M., Hinds, D., Prescod, C., Claudia Jones Symposium: Claudia Jones: a life in exile. Lawrence & Wishart, London (1999).
115.
Schwarz, Bill: ‘Claudia Jones and the West Indian gazette’: reflections on the emergence of post-colonial Britain.
116.
Davis, A.Y.: Women, race & class. Vintage Books, New York (1983).
117.
Binghamton University - History Department: Resources: Journal of History, https://www.binghamton.edu/history/resources/journal-of-history/woman-blk-trad.html.
118.
McDuffie, E.S.: Sojourning for freedom: black women, American communism, and the making of black left feminism. Duke University Press, Durham, [N.C.] (2011).
119.
Imaobong D. Umoren: ‘This is the Age of Woman’: Black Feminism and Black Internationalism in the Works of Una Marson, 1928-1938. https://doi.org/http://journals.sas.ac.uk/hwa/article/view/1689.
120.
Robinson, C.J.: Black Marxism: the making of the black radical tradition. Zed, London (1983).
121.
James, W.: A fierce hatred of injustice: Claude McKay’s Jamaica and his poetry of rebellion. Verso, London (2000).
122.
Hutchinson, E.O.: Blacks and reds: race and class in conflict, 1919-1990. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing (1995).
123.
James, W.: Being red and black in Jim Crow America: Souls. 1, 45–63 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1080/10999949909362185.
124.
Berland, Oscar: The Emergence of the Communist Perspective on the ‘Negro Question’ in America: 1919–1931: Part One.
125.
Campbell, S Campbell, S (correspondence author): BLACK BOLSHEVIKS AND RECOGNITION OF AFRICAN-AMERICA’S RIGHT TO SELF-DETERMINATION BY THE COMMUNIST PARTY USA.
126.
Fredrickson, G.M.: Black liberation: a comparative history of Black ideologies in the United States and South Africa. Oxford University Press, New York (1995).
127.
Benn, D.: The Caribbean: an intellectual history, 1774-2003. Ian Randle, Kingston [Jamaica] (2004).
128.
Solomon, M.I.: The cry was unity: communists and African Americans, 1917-36. University Press of Mississippi, Jackson (1998).
129.
Adi, H.: Pan-Africanism and Communism: the Communist International, Africa and the diaspora, 1919-1939. Africa World Press, Trenton, N.J. (2013).
130.
Baptiste, F.A., Lewis, R. eds: George Padmore: pan-African revolutionary. Ian Randle Publishers, Kingston [Jamaica] (2009).
131.
Polsgrove, C.: Ending British rule in Africa: writers in a common cause. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2009).
132.
James, L.: George Padmore and decolonization from below: pan-Africanism, the Cold War, and the end of empire. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2015).
133.
Weiss, H.: Framing a radical African Atlantic: African American Agency, West African intellectuals, and the International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers. Brill, Leiden (2014).
134.
Shachtman, M.: Race and revolution. Verso, London (2003).
135.
James, C.L.R., McLemee, S.: C.L.R. James on the ‘Negro question’. University Press of Mississippi, Jackson (1996).
136.
Høgsbjerg, C.: C.L.R. James in imperial Britain. Duke University Press, Durham, [North Carolina] (2014).
137.
Makalani, M.: In the cause of freedom: radical Black internationalism from Harlem to London, 1917-1939. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (2011).
138.
Pennybacker, S.D.: From Scottsboro to Munich: race and political culture in 1930s Britain. Princeton University Press, Princeton (2009).
139.
Burton, R.D.E., Réno, F.: French and West Indian: Martinique, Guadeloupe, and French Guiana today. University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville (1995).
140.
Lewis, S.K.: Race, culture, and identity: Francophone West African and Caribbean literature and theory from négritude to créolité. Lexington Books, Lanham, Md (2006).
141.
Hord, F.L., Lee, J.S.: I am because we are: readings in Black philosophy. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst (1995).
142.
A speech by Aime Cesaire: Negritude, Africa and Black History (Miami, 1987) - L’Humanité in English, http://www.humaniteinenglish.com/spip.php?article898.
143.
Césaire, A., Rosello, M., Pritchard, A.: Notebook of a return to my native land =: Cahier d’un retour au pays natal. Bloodaxe Books, Newcastle upon Tyne (1995).
144.
Bernabé, J., Chamoiseau, P., Confiant, R., Taleb-Khyar, M.B.: Éloge de la Créolité. Gallimard, Paris (1993).
145.
Forsdick, C., Murphy, D.: Postcolonial thought in the French-speaking world. Liverpool University Press, Liverpool (2009).
146.
Wilder, G.: The French imperial nation-state: negritude & colonial humanism between the two world wars. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2005).
147.
Ezra, E.: The colonial unconscious: race and culture in interwar France. Cornell University Press, Ithaca (2000).
148.
Jackson, J.H.: Making jazz French: music and modern life in interwar Paris. Duke University Press, Durham (2003).
149.
Edwards, B.H.: The practice of diaspora: literature, translation, and the rise of Black internationalism. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA (2003).
150.
Irele, A.: The negritude moment: explorations in francophone African and Caribbean literature and thought. Africa World, Trenton, N.J. (2011).
151.
Sharpley-Whiting, T.D.: Negritude women. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2002).
152.
Jack, B.E.: Negritude and literary criticism: the history and theory of ‘Negro-African’ literature in French. Greenwood Press, Westport, Conn (1996).
153.
Henke, H., Réno, F.: Modern political culture in the Caribbean. University of the West Indies Press, Kingston, Jamaica (2003).
154.
Diagne, S.B.: In Praise of the Post‐racial: Negritude Beyond Negritude. Third Text. 24, 241–248 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/09528821003722249.
155.
Ekpo, D.: Speak Negritude But Think and Act French: The Foundations of Senghor’s Political Philosophy. Third Text. 24, 227–239 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/09528821003722223.
156.
Fabre, Michel ; Cherry, Randall ; Eburne, Jonathan P: Rene, Louis, and Leopold: Senghorian Negritude as a Black Humanism.
157.
Wilder, Gary: Race, reason, impasse: Césaire, Fanon, and the legacy of emancipation.
158.
Jane Hiddleston: AIMÉ CÉSAIRE AND POSTCOLONIAL HUMANISM.
159.
Bernasconi, R.: The Assumption of Negritude: Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, and the Vicious Circle of Racial Politics. Parallax. 8, 69–83 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1080/13534640210138946.
160.
Garraway, D.L.: "What Is Mine”: Césairean Negritude between the Particular and the Universal. Research in African Literatures. 41, 71–86 (2010). https://doi.org/10.2979/RAL.2010.41.1.71.
161.
Wilder, G.: Freedom time: negritude, decolonization, and the future of the world. Duke University Press, Durham [North Carolina] (2015).
162.
Forsdick, C., Murphy, D.: Postcolonial thought in the French-speaking world. Liverpool University Press, Liverpool (2009).
163.
Macey, D.: Frantz Fanon: a life. Granta Books, London (2000).
164.
Fanon, F.: The wretched of the earth. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1990).
165.
Macey, D.: Frantz Fanon: a life. Granta Books, London (2000).
166.
Bell, V.: Introduction: Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth 50 Years On. Theory, Culture & Society. 27, 7–14 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276410383721.
167.
Zeilig, L.: Frantz Fanon: the militant philosopher of the third world revolution. I.B. Tauris, London (2016).
168.
Hudis, P.: Frantz Fanon: philosopher of the barricades. PlutoPress, London (2015).
169.
Gibson, N.C.: Living Fanon: global perspectives. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2011).
170.
Gordon, L.R., White, R.T., Sharpley-Whiting, T.D., Symposium on Afro-American Culture and Philosophy: Fanon: a critical reader. Blackwell, Oxford (1996).
171.
Alessandrini, A.C.: Frantz Fanon: critical perspectives. Routledge, London (1999).
172.
Gibson, N.C.: Fanon: the postcolonial imagination. Polity Press in association with Blackwell Pub., Distributed in the USA by Blackwell Pub, Cambridge, U.K. :, Malden, MA (2003).
173.
Gibson, N.C.: Rethinking Fanon: the continuing dialogue. Humanity Books, Amherst, N.Y. (1999).
174.
Young, R.J.C.: Fanon and the turn to armed struggle in Africa. Wasafiri. 20, 33–41 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/02690050508589949.
175.
Macey, D.: ‘I Am My Own Foundation’: Frantz Fanon as a Source of Continued Political Embarrassment. Theory, Culture & Society. 27, 33–51 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276410383707.
176.
Henry, P.: Caliban’s reason: introducing Afro-Caribbean philosophy. Routledge, New York (2000).
177.
Kaempf, S.: Violence and Victory: guerrilla warfare, ‘authentic self-affirmation’ and the overthrow of the colonial state. Third World Quarterly. 30, 129–146 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436590802622433.
178.
Fanon, F.: Black skin, white masks. Pluto, London (2008).
179.
Silverman, M.: Frantz Fanon’s Black skin, white masks: new interdisciplinary essays. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2005).
180.
Eid, Haidar ; Ghazel, Khaled: Footprints of Fanon in Gillo Pontecorvo’s The Battle of Algiers and Sembene Ousamne’s Xala.
181.
Césaire, A., Kelley, R.D.G.: Discourse on colonialism. Monthly Review Press, New York (2000).
182.
Davis, G.: Aimé Césaire. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
183.
Kemedjio, C.: Aimé Césaire’s : The Practice of Decolonization. Research in African Literatures. 41, 87–108 (2010). https://doi.org/10.2979/RAL.2010.41.1.87.
184.
James, C.L.R., Walvin, J.: The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L’Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution. Penguin, London (2001).
185.
Hall, Stuart ; Schwarz, Bill: Breaking Bread with History: C. L. R. James and ‘The Black Jacobins Stuart Hall Interviewed by Bill Schwarz’.
186.
Fanon and the Caribbean by C.L.R. James November 1978, https://www.marxists.org/archive/james-clr/works/1978/11/fanon.htm.
187.
Fairclough, A.: Better day coming: Blacks and equality, 1890-2000. Penguin, New York (2002).
188.
Seidman, Sarah: Tricontinental routes of solidarity: Stokely carmichael in Cuba.
189.
Marable, M., Mullings, L.: Let nobody turn us around: voices of resistance, reform, and renewal : an African American anthology. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md (2009).
190.
Carmichael, S., Hamilton, C.V.: Black power: the politics of liberation in America. Vintage Books, New York (1967).
191.
Joseph, P.E.: Stokely: a life. Basic Civitas, a member of the Perseus Book Club, New York (2014).
192.
Joseph, P.E.: The Black power movement: rethinking the civil rights-Black power era. Routledge, New York (2006).
193.
Joseph, P.E.: Waiting ’til the midnight hour: a narrative history of black power in America. New York, N.Y. (2006).
194.
Barbour, F.B.: The Black Power revolt: a collection of essays. P. Sargent, Boston (1968).
195.
Carson, C.: In struggle: SNCC and the Black awakening of the 1960s. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (1981).
196.
Marable, M.: Race, reform and rebellion: the second reconstruction in black America, 1945-1990. Macmillan Education, Basingstoke (1991).
197.
Van Deburg, W.L.: New day in Babylon: the Black power movement and American culture, 1965-1975. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1992).
198.
Jones, C.E.: The Black Panther Party (reconsidered). Black Classic Press, Baltimore, MD (1998).
199.
Brown, S.: Fighting for US: Maulana Karenga, the US organization, and black cultural nationalism. New York University Press, New York (2003).
200.
Lazerow, J., Williams, Y.R.: In search of the Black Panther Party: new perspectives on a revolutionary movement. Duke University Press, Durham, [N.C.] (2006).
201.
West, M.O., Martin, W.G., Wilkins, F.C.: From Toussaint to Tupac: the black international since the age of revolution. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (2009).
202.
Mills, S.: The empire within: postcolonial thought and political activism in sixties Montreal. McGill-Queen’s University Press, Montreal (2010).
203.
Austin, David: All Roads Led to Montreal: Black Power, the Caribbean, and the Black Radical Tradition in Canada.
204.
Forsythe, D.: Let the niggers burn!: the Sir George Williams University affair and its Caribbean aftermath. Our Generation Press, Montreal (1971).
205.
Black Power - speech by C L R James in 1967, https://www.marxists.org/archive/james-clr/works/1967/black-power.htm.
206.
X, M., Haley, A., Handler, M.S.: The autobiography of Malcolm X. Ballantine Books, New York (1973).
207.
Cleaver, E.: Soul on ice. Laurel/Dell, New York (1992).
208.
Olsson, G.H., Rogell, A., Lejonqvist, H., Kweli, T., Badu, E., Oyewole, A., Davis, A.Y., Belafonte, H., Thompson, I.: The Black power mixtape 1967-1975, (2011).
209.
Rodney, W.: The groundings with my brothers. Bogle-L’Ouverture, London (1969).
210.
Quinn, K.: Black power in the Caribbean. University Press of Florida, Gainesville (2014).
211.
Oxaal, I.: Race and revolutionary consciousness: a documentary interpretation of the 1970 Black power revolt in Trinidad. Schenkman Pub. Co, Cambridge, Mass (1971).
212.
Quinn, K.: Black power in the Caribbean. University Press of Florida, Gainesville (2014).
213.
Coombs, O.: Is Massa Day dead?: Black moods in the Caribbean. Anchor/Doubleday, Garden City, N.Y. (1974).
214.
Lowenthal, D.: Post-Emancipation Race Relations: Some Caribbean and American Perspectives. Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs. 13, (1971). https://doi.org/10.2307/174928.
215.
Lowenthal, D: Black power in the Caribbean context, http://ucl-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/display.do?frbrVersion=4&tabs=detailsTab&ct=display&fn=search&doc=TN_proquest37598847&indx=2&recIds=TN_proquest37598847&recIdxs=1&elementId=1&renderMode=poppedOut&displayMode=full&frbrVersion=4&frbg=&&dscnt=0&scp.scps=primo_central_multiple_fe&tb=t&mode=Basic&vid=UCL_VU1&srt=rank&tab=local&dum=true&vl(freeText0)=David%20Lowenthal%2C%20%E2%80%98Black%20Power%20in%20the%20Caribbean%20Context%E2%80%99&dstmp=1453736278513.
216.
West, M.O., Martin, W.G., Wilkins, F.C.: From Toussaint to Tupac: the black international since the age of revolution. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (2009).
217.
Meeks, B.: Radical Caribbean: from black power to Abu Bakr. The Press University of the West Indies, Barbados (1996).
218.
Rodney, W.: Walter Rodney speaks: the making of an African intellectual. Africa World Press, Trenton, N.J. (1990).
219.
Lewis, R.: Walter Rodney’s intellectual and political thought. Press University of the West Indies, Kinsgton, Jamaica (1998).
220.
Lewis, R.: Walter Rodney: 1968 revisited. Canoe Press, Kingston (1998).
221.
James, C.L.R.: Walter Rodney and the question of power. Race Today Publications, [London] (1983).
222.
West, M.O.: Seeing Darkly: Guyana, Black Power, and Walter Rodney’s Expulsion from Jamaica. Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism. 12, 93–104 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1215/-12-1-93.
223.
Nettleford, R.M.: Mirror, mirror: identity. (1970).
224.
Anthony Payne, 1952-: Politics in Jamaica / Anthony J. Payne.
225.
Knight, F.W., Palmer, C.A.: The modern Caribbean. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill [N.C.] (1989).
226.
Ryan, S.D., Stewart, T., Mc Cree, R.: The Black Power revolution, 1970: a retrospective. I.S.E.R., University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad (1995).
227.
Oxaal, I.: Race and revolutionary consciousness: a documentary interpretation of the 1970 Black power revolt in Trinidad. Schenkman Pub. Co, Cambridge, Mass (1971).
228.
Craig, S.: Contemporary Caribbean: a sociological reader. S. Craig, [S.l.] (1981).
229.
Nicholls, D., St. Antony’s College (University of Oxford): Haiti in Caribbean context: ethnicity, economy and revolt. Macmillan in association with St. Antony’s College Oxford, Basingstoke (1985).
230.
Lovelace, E.: Is just a movie. Haymarket, Chicago, Ill (2012).
231.
Lovelace, E.: The dragon can’t dance: a novel. Persea, New York (1998).
232.
Hill Collins, P.: Black feminist thought: knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment. Routledge, New York (2009).
233.
Marable, M., Mullings, L.: Let nobody turn us around: voices of resistance, reform, and renewal : an African American anthology. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md (2009).
234.
Nnaemeka, O.: Sisterhood, feminisms and power: from Africa to the diaspora. Africa World Press, Trenton, N.J. (1998).
235.
Mohanty, C.T., Russo, A., Torres, L.: Third World women and the politics of feminism. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Ind (1991).
236.
Mohanty, C.T.: Feminism without borders: decolonizing theory, practicing solidarity. Duke University Press, Durham (2003).
237.
Mohammed, P Mohammed, P (correspondence author): Nuancing the feminist discourse in the Caribbean.
238.
Boyce Davies, C., Gadsby, M., Peterson, C., Williams, H.: Decolonizing the academy: African diaspora studies. Africa World Press, Trenton, N.J. (2003).
239.
Narayan, U.: Dislocating cultures: identities, traditions, and Third-World feminism. Routledge, New York (1997).
240.
James, J., Sharpley-Whiting, T.D.: The Black feminist reader. Blackwell, Oxford (2000).
241.
Guy-Sheftall, B. ed: Words of fire: an anthology of African-American feminist thought. The New Press, New York (1995).
242.
Mohammed, P.: Gendered realities: essays in Caribbean feminist thought. University of the West Indies Press, Kingston (2002).
243.
hooks, bell: Ain’t I a woman: black women and feminism. Pluto Press, London (1982).
244.
hooks, bell: We real cool: black men and masculinity. Routledge, New York (2004).
245.
hooks, bell, West, C.: Breaking bread: insurgent Black intellectual life. South End Press, Cambridge, Mass (1991).
246.
Lorde, A.: Sister outsider: essays and speeches. Crossing Press, Trumansburg, NY (1984).
247.
University of Birmingham. Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies: The Empire strikes back: race and racism in 70s Britain. Hutchinson in association with the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, London (1982).
248.
Neville, Helen ; Hamer, Jennifer Neville, Helen (correspondence author): ‘We make freedom’: an exploration of Revolutionary Black Feminism.
249.
Collins, Patricia Hill: Gender, Black Feminism, and Black Political Economy.
250.
Springer, K.: Third Wave Black Feminism? Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 27, 1059–1082 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1086/339636.
251.
Davis, A.Y., James, J.: The Angela Y. Davis reader. Blackwell, Malden, Mass (1998).
252.
Davis, A.Y.: Women, race & class. Vintage Books, New York (1983).
253.
Marable, M., Mullings, L.: Let nobody turn us around: voices of resistance, reform, and renewal : an African American anthology. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Md (2009).
254.
McDuffie, E.S.: Sojourning for freedom: black women, American communism, and the making of black left feminism. Duke University Press, Durham, [N.C.] (2011).
255.
Imaobong D. Umoren: ‘This is the Age of Woman’: Black Feminism and Black Internationalism in the Works of Una Marson, 1928-1938. https://doi.org/http://journals.sas.ac.uk/hwa/article/view/1689.
256.
Knight, F.W., Martínez Vergne, T.: Contemporary Caribbean cultures and societies in a global context. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill (2005).
257.
Bogues, A.: Black heretics, black prophets: radical political intellectuals. Routledge, New York (2003).
258.
Farred, G.: What’s my name?: Black vernacular intellectuals. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2003).
259.
Bogues, A.: Black heretics, black prophets: radical political intellectuals. Routledge, New York (2003).
260.
Chevannes, B., Institute of Social Studies (Netherlands): Rastafari and other African-Caribbean worldviews. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1997).
261.
Chevannes, B.: Rastafari: roots and ideology. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, N.Y (1994).
262.
Chevannes, B.: Ships that will never sail: the paradox of Rastafari Pan-Africanism. Critical Arts. 25, 565–575 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/02560046.2011.639995.
263.
Campbell, H.: Rasta and resistance: from Marcus Garvey to Walter Rodney. Hansib, London (1985).
264.
Hutton, Clinton: Oh Rudie: Jamaican Popular Music and the Narrative of Urban Badness in the Making of Postcolonial Society.
265.
Henry, F., International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences: Ethnicity in the Americas. Mouton, The Hague (1976).
266.
Nettleford, R.M.: Mirror, mirror: identity. (1970).
267.
King, S.A., Bays, B.T., Foster, P.R.: Reggae, Rastafari, and the rhetoric of social control. University Press of Mississippi, Jackson (2002).
268.
Simpson, G.E.: Religious cults of the Caribbean: Trinidad, Jamaica, and Haiti. Institute of Caribbean Studies, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, P.R. (1980).
269.
Gray, O.: Demeaned but empowered: the social power of the urban poor in Jamaica. University of the West Indies Press, Kingston, Jamaica (2004).
270.
Henke, H., Réno, F.: Modern political culture in the Caribbean. University of the West Indies Press, Kingston, Jamaica (2003).
271.
Singh, S.: Resistance, essentialism, and empowerment in black nationalist discourse in the African Diaspora: A comparison of the back to Africa, black power, and rastafari movements. Journal of African American Studies. 8, 18–36 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12111-004-1011-3.
272.
Tafari, I: The Rastafari - Successors of Marcus Garvey.
273.
Waters, A.M.: Race, class, and political symbols: Rastafari and reggae in Jamaican politics. Transaction Books, New Brunswick, N.J. (1985).
274.
Edmonds, E.B.: Rastafari: from outcasts to culture bearers. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2003).
275.
Price, C.: Becoming Rasta: origins of Rastafari identity in Jamaica. New York University Press, New York (2009).
276.
Katz, D.: Solid foundation: an oral history of reggae. Jawbone, London (2012).
277.
Bradley, L.: Bass culture: when reggae was king. Penguin, London (2001).
278.
King, S., Jensen, R.J.: Bob Marley’s ‘Redemption Song’: The Rhetoric of Reggae and Rastafari. The Journal of Popular Culture. 29, 17–36 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0022-3840.1995.00017.x.
279.
Henry, W. ‘Lez’: Reggae, Rasta and the Role of the Deejay in the Black British Experience. Contemporary British History. 26, 355–373 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2012.703024.
280.
Jaffe, R., Sanderse, J.: Surinamese Maroons as reggae artistes: music, marginality and urban space. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 33, 1561–1579 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870903259546.
281.
Wittmann, F.: The global–local nexus: popular music studies and the case of Rastafari culture in West Africa. Critical Arts. 25, 150–174 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/02560046.2011.569058.
282.
Marcuse, H., Kellner, D.: Art and liberation. Routledge, London (2007).
283.
Patterson, O.: The children of Sisyphus. Peepal Tree, Leeds (2010).