

An edition of The rise and decline of an alliance (1999)
Cuba and African American leaders in the 1960s
By Ruth Reitan
Publish Date
1999
Publisher
Michigan State University Press
Language
eng
Pages
155
Description:
In the 1960s a critical fracture occurred in the American Civil Rights movement creating, in the process, a new group of black nationalists. The burgeoning militant wing of the movement believed it had found a natural ally in Fidel Castro's Cuban revolutionary regime and forged a close relationship with its leaders. Revolutionary Cuba offered solidarity and support to civil rights leaders and urban militants alike. This work explores the rich and largely unexplored relationship between the Castro regime and the U.S. black leadership in the 1960s. New insights, interviews, and alternative sources are intertwined with accounts that have been culled from the activists' writings and speeches generated over the past three decades. These sources are also weighed against current scholarship, original documents, and newspaper accounts, and are placed in their proper historical context.
subjects: Politics and government, African Americans, Relations, Relations with Cubans, African American leadership, History, Noirs américains, Relations avec les Cubains, Leadership noir américain, Histoire, Politique et gouvernement, POLITICAL SCIENCE, Political Process, General, Elections, International relations, Bürgerrechtsbewegung, Geschichte 1960-1970, Revolution
Places: Cuba, United States
Times: 1959-, 20th century