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Freedom is Indivisible: The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Cold War Politics, and International Liberation Movements.

机译:自由是不可分割的:学生非暴力协调委员会(SNCC),冷战政治和国际解放运动。

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摘要

This transnational history analyzes the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), its relationship with international liberation struggles, and the place of Cold War politics in defining civil rights from 1960 through the early 1970s. Most accounts of SNCC focus on the organization's grassroots work throughout the American South; on voter registration and nonviolent direct action; and on the organization's later turn to Black Power. Yet SNCC's April 1960 founding conference also emphasized solidarity with international struggles, and my work seeks to restore the organization's broad vision to scholarly attention. I place SNCC's creation within the context of worldwide decolonization movements and independence struggles, arguing that these international shifts were crucial to SNCC's formation.;My project highlights the development of SNCC's Cold War critique of U.S. racial practices as part of the organization's push for civil and human rights. SNCC connected many of its activities in the American South – the 1964 Mississippi Summer Project, for example – with international ideas and movements, and with the potential of Cold War damage to the United States if the country did not create and enforce an America that reflected its proclaimed global values. My project also reveals how decolonization and African independence defined SNCC's domestic civil rights fight. SNCC sought inspiration and practical strategies from struggles in Ghana, Guinea, South Africa, and elsewhere, and I show how SNCC in turn served as a resource for political movements outside the United States. Even as members devoted great energy to domestic fights for political, social, and economic justice, SNCC also turned outward, connecting racial discrimination in the United States to the treatment of people of color throughout the world. SNCC leaders linked global transformations to changes in the United States, and its organizers and writers emphasized the parallels between domestic racism and colonialism abroad. By 1966, organization leaders called for a Third World alliance to unite black Americans with colonized Africans, Asians, and Latin Americans, forging a link between their own civil rights movement and international liberation struggles. Throughout the end of the 1960s and into the 1970s, SNCC activists increased their identification with African liberation struggles and independence movements throughout the Third World, realizing the "indivisible nature" of the global struggles against racism, colonialism, and apartheid.;By tracing the internal debates, public pronouncements, and changing organizing strategies that defined this leading civil rights organization, my dissertation fills a critical historical gap. Following scholars such as Mary Dudziak, James Meriwether, Brenda Gayle Plummer, and Penny Von Eschen, who have shown how international connections defined earlier civil rights efforts, and building upon pioneering histories of SNCC by Clayborne Carson and others, I argue that international currents proved critical to SNCC's fight for domestic civil rights and global human rights. My work is part of larger effort by a number of scholars, remapping the chronology and geography of one of the most profound moments in American history. An intellectual, social, and political history of a key decade in United States and world history, my dissertation contends that SNCC demanded social change within and beyond the borders of the United States, and that a better understanding of SNCC furthers the internationalization of U.S. history, and a new retelling of the Black freedom struggle.
机译:这段跨国历史分析了学生非暴力协调委员会(SNCC),它与国际解放斗争的关系,以及从1960年到1970年代初冷战政治在定义公民权利中的地位。 SNCC的大多数报道都集中在整个美国南部组织的基层工作。进行选民登记和非暴力直接行动;后来该组织转向Black Power。 SNCC在1960年4月的成立大会上也强调了对国际斗争的声援,而我的工作旨在恢复该组织的广泛视野,以引起学术界的关注。我将SNCC的创作置于全球非殖民化运动和独立斗争的背景下,认为这些国际转变对SNCC的形成至关重要。我的项目着重强调了SNCC对美国种族习俗的冷战批判的发展,这是该组织推动民间和社会发展的一部分。人权。 SNCC将其在美国南部的许多活动(例如1964年的密西西比州夏季计划)与国际思想和运动联系起来,并与冷战对美国的潜在破坏(如果该国未建立并执行一个反映了它的全球价值。我的项目还揭示了非殖民化和非洲独立如何定义了SNCC的国内民权斗争。 SNCC从加纳,几内亚,南非和其他地方的斗争中寻求灵感和实用策略,我向您展示了SNCC又如何成为美国境外政治运动的资源。甚至当成员们为政治,社会和经济正义的国内斗争投入巨大精力时,SNCC也转向了外部,将美国的种族歧视与全世界有色人种的待遇联系起来。 SNCC领导人将全球变革与美国的变化联系在一起,其组织者和作家强调了国内种族主义和国外殖民主义之间的相似之处。到1966年,该组织的领导人呼吁建立第三世界联盟,以将黑人美国人与殖民地的非洲人,亚洲人和拉丁美洲人团结起来,在自己的民权运动与国际解放斗争之间建立联系。在整个1960年代末到1970年代,SNCC激进主义者越来越认同整个第三世界的非洲解放斗争和独立运动,认识到全球反对种族主义,殖民主义和种族隔离的斗争具有“不可分割的性质”。内部辩论,公开声明以及不断变化的组织策略定义了这个领先的民权组织,我的论文填补了一个重要的历史空白。继玛丽·杜德亚克(Mary Dudziak),詹姆斯·梅里韦瑟(James Meriwether),布伦达·盖尔·普鲁默(Brenda Gayle Plummer)和潘妮·冯·埃申(Penny Von Eschen)等学者展示了国际联系如何界定较早的民权努力之后,并基于克莱伯恩·卡森(Clayborne Carson)等人的SNCC开拓性历史,我认为国际潮流已得到证明对于SNCC争取国内民权和全球人权至关重要。我的作品是许多学者做出更大努力的一部分,重新​​映射了美国历史上最深刻的时刻之一的年代和地理。我的论文论证了美国和世界历史上关键十年的知识,社会和政治历史,它要求SNCC要求在美国境内外进行社会变革,并且对SNCC的更好理解将促进美国历史的国际化,并重新宣扬了黑人自由斗争。

著录项

  • 作者

    Wood, Julia Erin.;

  • 作者单位

    Yale University.;

  • 授予单位 Yale University.;
  • 学科 African American Studies.;History Black.;History United States.;American Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 335 p.
  • 总页数 335
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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