
Book contents
- Race, Rights and Reform
- Global and International History
- Race, Rights and Reform
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Terminology and Language
- Introduction
- 1 Black Is a Country, n’est-ce pas? Race, Rights and Nation in the Wilsonian Moment
- 2 Anti-imperial Comrades: Black Radicalism and the Communist Possibility
- 3 La vogue nègre: Racial Renaissance at the Intersection of Republic, Empire and Democracy
- 4 Civilization’s Gone to Hell? Revolutionary Poetry, Humanism and the Crisis of Sovereignty
- 5 Give Me Liberty! Black Intellectual Struggles against Fascism in the Fight for Democracy
- 6 “A New Fascism, the American Brand”: Anti-communism, Anti-imperialism and the Struggle for the West
- 7 “The Sword of Damocles”: Présence Africaine and Decolonization in the Face of the Cold War
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - “A New Fascism, the American Brand”: Anti-communism, Anti-imperialism and the Struggle for the West
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2021
- Race, Rights and Reform
- Global and International History
- Race, Rights and Reform
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Terminology and Language
- Introduction
- 1 Black Is a Country, n’est-ce pas? Race, Rights and Nation in the Wilsonian Moment
- 2 Anti-imperial Comrades: Black Radicalism and the Communist Possibility
- 3 La vogue nègre: Racial Renaissance at the Intersection of Republic, Empire and Democracy
- 4 Civilization’s Gone to Hell? Revolutionary Poetry, Humanism and the Crisis of Sovereignty
- 5 Give Me Liberty! Black Intellectual Struggles against Fascism in the Fight for Democracy
- 6 “A New Fascism, the American Brand”: Anti-communism, Anti-imperialism and the Struggle for the West
- 7 “The Sword of Damocles”: Présence Africaine and Decolonization in the Face of the Cold War
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The post-war era began with optimism and the hope of liberty for all but it did not last. Between 1945 and 1947, the atrocities of the Nazi death camps received significant public attention in the United States. Very quickly, however, the horror was assimilated into a narrative of a particular Nazi identity, rooted in flawed domestic politics. This chapter charts the ways that black intellectuals, caught at the crossroads of race and republican values which enmeshed in the Cold War clash between communism and capitalism, fought against “an American brand” of fascism to realize the democratic potential of the French Union and the United States. Thinkers such as Aimé Césaire, Claude McKay and Langston Hughes – all of whom had compared Nazism with US Jim Crowism and European colonization during the war - were quick to point to the hollowness of a victory rhetoric while there were no universally guaranteed rights. As far as they were concerned, the end of World War II, far from vanquishing fascism once and for all, had merely shifted the battle lines. These men and women aired their views through a variety of mediums, from speeches on the Senate floor through to poetry and political petitions. This chapter brings these diverse sources together, often for the first time, to illustrate their visions for a post-war order.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Race, Rights and ReformBlack Activism in the French Empire and the United States from World War I to the Cold War, pp. 190 - 236Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021