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Dialectics of Black Freedom Struggles: Race, Philosophy and the Needed
American Revolution
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Table of Contents
PREFACE
CHAPTER 1
Permanent War or "Revolution in Permanence"? The Continuing Challenge of
Black Masses as Vanguard
The Black Dimension's Opposition to Imperialist War
The New Challenges Posed by September 11, 2001
Black America's Challenge to the Anti-War and Other Liberation Movements
CHAPTER 2
The Struggle for Civil Rights and the Limits of Political Emancipation
From the Great Migration to the Civil Rights Movement
Beyond Political Emancipation: The Challenge of Urban Revolts and Black Power
Women's Liberation as Force and Reason
CHAPTER 3
Dialectics and Economics: The New Challenges Posed by Globalized Capital
Two Decades of Economic Restructuring—and of Revolt
Southern Workers Speak for Themselves
The Movement Against Environmental Racism
The Los Angeles Rebellion of 1992: A New Beginning?
The Two-Way Road Between the U.S. and Africa
CHAPTER 4
Prisoners Speak for Themselves: People of Color and the Prison Industrial
Complex
Incarceration as a Racial Policy
Cultural Genocide: The War on Drugs
Privatization: The New Slave Trade
Black Women and the Family
Capitalist Fundamentals: Economic and Representative Racism
New Movements Against the Criminal Injustice System
CHAPTER 5
The Self-Determination of the Idea in the African-American Struggle for
Freedom
Marx's Marxism Viewed with Eyes of Today
Post-Marx Marxism and the Black Dimension
Beyond Post-Marx Marxism: Debates on the Independent Struggles of Black Masses
The Revolutionary Humanism of Frantz Fanon
Afrocentricity and the Dialectic of Culture
The Contradictory Legacies of C.L.R. James
Re-creating Marxist-Humanism: Towards a New Unity of Theory and Practice
Appendix
Grenada: Revolution and Counter-Revolution
by Raya Dunayevskaya
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