从革命时代到第一次世界大战的黑人妇女国际主义

Brandon R. Byrd
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引用次数: 1

摘要

黑人国际主义描述了为应对奴隶制、殖民主义和白人帝国主义而形成的政治文化和思想实践。这是一场植根于全球意识的反对种族压迫的历史性和持续的集体斗争。虽然黑人国际主义的表达确实随着时间和地点的变化而变化,但通过合作实现黑人解放一直是并且仍然是其最终目标。自从跨大西洋奴隶贸易和革命时期黑人国际主义兴起以来,像诗人菲利斯·惠特利和福音传教士丽贝卡·普罗滕这样的黑人女性一直站在最前沿。他们的著作和行动主义支持非洲散居者的全球意识,促进了普遍解放的事业。在19世纪,黑人女性国际主义者包括废奴主义者、传教士和俱乐部女性。她们在前辈工作的基础上,为20世纪早期的黑人女性国际主义者奠定了基础。到第一次世界大战时,新一代黑人女性活动家和知识分子仍然是国际妇女理事会(International Council of women)和全球黑人改善协会(Universal Negro Improvement Association)的重要组成部分。国际妇女理事会是由美国白人妇女参政论者创立的组织,而全球黑人改善协会是由牙买加泛非主义者马库斯·加维(Marcus Garvey)正式领导的。但她们也成立了一个独立的组织,国际黑暗种族妇女理事会(ICWDR)。在《国际残疾人权利公约》内外,来自非洲和散居海外的黑人妇女面临并挑战基于性别和种族的歧视。他们的行动主义和智力工作为后来由自称的黑人女权主义者塑造的黑人国际主义浪潮树立了强有力的先例。
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Black Women’s Internationalism from the Age of Revolutions to World War I
Black internationalism describes the political culture and intellectual practice forged in response to slavery, colonialism, and white imperialism. It is a historical and ongoing collective struggle against racial oppression rooted in global consciousness. While the expression of black internationalism has certainly changed across time and place, black liberation through collaboration has been and remains its ultimate goal. Since the emergence of black internationalism as a result of the transatlantic slave trade and during the Age of Revolutions, black women such as the poet Phyllis Wheatley and evangelist Rebecca Protten have been at its forefront. Their writings and activism espoused an Afro-diasporic, global consciousness and promoted the cause of universal emancipation. During the 19th century, black women internationalists included abolitionists, missionaries, and clubwomen. They built on the work of their predecessors while laying the foundations for succeeding black women internationalists in the early 20th century. By World War I, a new generation of black women activists and intellectuals remained crucial parts of the International Council of Women, an organization founded by white suffragists from the United States, and the Universal Negro Improvement Association, a global organization formally led by Jamaican pan-Africanist Marcus Garvey. But they also formed an independent organization, the International Council of Women of the Darker Races (ICWDR). Within and outside of the ICWDR, black women from Africa and the African Diaspora faced and challenged discrimination on the basis of their sex and race. Their activism and intellectual work set a powerful precedent for a subsequent wave of black internationalism shaped by self-avowed black feminists.
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