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The Sons of Shebas Race African-Americans and the Italo-Ethiopian War, 1935-1941
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The Sons of Sheba's Race: African-Americans and the Italo-Ethiopian War, 1935-1941 illustrates the response to the Italo-Ethiopian War of people of color who linked the Ethiopian struggle to their own battles against racism and imperialism. William R. Scott demonÂstrates the significance of Ethiopia as a hisÂtorical symbol for African-Americans. They prayed, preached, and protested to help save the world's last outpost of authentic black rule from white control. The African-American response to the Italian invasion of Ethiopia provides a picture of black intelÂlectual thought in America in the 1930s.
William R. Scott challenges the view that the Great Depression virtually ended supÂport for black nationalism, showing that eleÂments of the nationalist creed remained crucial to black American ideology a deÂcade after the decline of Garveyism and contributed to African-American sympathy for Ethiopia. Scott focuses on the pro-EthioÂpian activities of the Harlem united front, which brought together black nationalists, communists, and civil rights moderates. He shows the extensive elite and grassroots interest in Ethiopia's fate and the wideÂspread recognition that Ethiopia's indepenÂdence was extremely important to black racial pride. The book also cogently examÂines the issue of Ethiopian racial identity, the controversy over this issue, and its effect on African-American support for the Ethiopian cause.
Pan-Africanism, Africa and African-American relations, and the role of the religiopolitical concept of Ethiopianism all came into play in the doomed efforts to assist Ethiopia in its struggle against fascist tyranny. Scott concludes that black poverty and powerlessness impeded black American efforts to assist Ethiopia, but that prodigious pro-Ethiopian activism produced important new appreciations of Africa, the Western powers, and world race relations among the black American masses.
William Scott's Sons of Sheba's Race represents the work of a master historian. It is the distillation of a lifetime of study of Ethiopia's relations with the black world and a foundational work for the study of Ethiopianism. Simultaneously immensely erudite and passionate in its devotion, the original publication of The Sons of Sheba's Race represented a giant leap forward. Now with the reissue of this important historical classic we can expect still further advances in the appreciation of Ethiopia and Ethiopianism as constitutive of the worldview of African Americans and the peoples of the worldwide African Diaspora.Robert A. Hill, Editor-in-Chief, The Marcus Garvey & UNIA Papers and Professor of History, UCLA
William Scott's Sons of Sheba's Race represents the work of a master historian. It is the distillation of a lifetime of study of Ethiopia's relations with the black world and a foundational work for the study of Ethiopianism. Simultaneously immensely erudite and passionate in its devotion, the original publication of The Sons of Sheba's Race represented a giant leap forward. Now with the reissue of this important historical classic we can expect still further advances in the appreciation of Ethiopia and Ethiopianism as constitutive of the worldview of African Americans and the peoples of the worldwide African Diaspora.
Robert A. Hill, Editor-in-Chief, The Marcus Garvey & UNIA Papers and Professor of History, UCLA
The Sons of Sheba's Race: African-Americans and the Italo-Ethiopian War, 1935-1941 is an excellent work that helps to fill an important gap in recent scholarship on Afro-American interest in Africa and efforts by Afro-Americans to influence American foreign affairs regarding the black world. Robert L. Harris, Jr. is a Professor of African-American History.It is a book that ought to be widely read by people of African descent, particularly by Ethiopians, for it is invaluable..." Ayele Bekerie, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History at Cornell University
The Sons of Sheba's Race: African-Americans and the Italo-Ethiopian War, 1935-1941 is an excellent work that helps to fill an important gap in recent scholarship on Afro-American interest in Africa and efforts by Afro-Americans to influence American foreign affairs regarding the black world.
Robert L. Harris, Jr. is a Professor of African-American History.
It is a book that ought to be widely read by people of African descent, particularly by Ethiopians, for it is invaluable..."
Ayele Bekerie, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History at Cornell University
William R. Scott is a Professor of History and Director of African-American Studies at Lehigh University. He is author of many articles on Ethiopianism and Ethiopian and African-American relations.
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