Book contents
- Women’s International Thought: A New History
- Women’s International Thought: A New History
- Copyright page
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Toward a History of Women’s International Thought
- Part I Canonical Thinkers
- Part II Outsiders
- Part III Thinking in or around the Academy
- 10 From F. Melian Stawell to E. Greene Balch: International and Internationalist Thinking at the Gender Margins, 1919–1947
- 11 Race, Gender, Empire, and War in the International Thought of Emily Greene Balch
- 12 Beyond Illusions: Imperialism, Race, and Technology in Merze Tate’s International Thought
- 13 A Plan for Plenty: The International Thought of Barbara Wootton
- 14 Collective Security for Common Men and Women: Vera Micheles Dean and US Foreign Relations
- 15 What Can We (She) Know about Sovereignty?: Krystyna Marek and the Worldedness of International Law
- Index
12 - Beyond Illusions: Imperialism, Race, and Technology in Merze Tate’s International Thought
from Part III - Thinking in or around the Academy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 January 2021
- Women’s International Thought: A New History
- Women’s International Thought: A New History
- Copyright page
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Toward a History of Women’s International Thought
- Part I Canonical Thinkers
- Part II Outsiders
- Part III Thinking in or around the Academy
- 10 From F. Melian Stawell to E. Greene Balch: International and Internationalist Thinking at the Gender Margins, 1919–1947
- 11 Race, Gender, Empire, and War in the International Thought of Emily Greene Balch
- 12 Beyond Illusions: Imperialism, Race, and Technology in Merze Tate’s International Thought
- 13 A Plan for Plenty: The International Thought of Barbara Wootton
- 14 Collective Security for Common Men and Women: Vera Micheles Dean and US Foreign Relations
- 15 What Can We (She) Know about Sovereignty?: Krystyna Marek and the Worldedness of International Law
- Index
Summary
Merze Tate, a graduate of both Oxford and Harvard, was one of the few African-American women who secured a professorship at an American university in the 1940s. This chapter analyses Tate’s early intellectual formation in interwar Anglo-American academic internationalism, augmented by her global travels and her time teaching in the segregated south. At Howard University, she continued her analysis of American racism and imperialism and developed a distinctive ‘anti-racist geopolitics.’ She regarded herself first and foremost as a diplomatic historian, with a realist bent. This did not mean that Tate embraced a restrictive view on the public’s say in foreign policy formation, particularly when this public was African-American. But Tate insisted that to hold U.S. power to account, one had to understand what power was and how it was wielded internationally.
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- Women's International Thought: A New History , pp. 266 - 285Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
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