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Tabula Rasa
Print version ISSN 1794-2489
Abstract
IBORRA-MALLENT, Juan Vicente and MONTANEZ-PICO, Daniel. The origins of the idea of ‘internal colonialism’ in African-American Communist Harry Haywood’s critical thinking: A Chronicle of a Conversation with Gwendolyn Midlo Hall. Tabula Rasa [online]. 2020, n.35, pp.89-114. Epub Feb 26, 2021. ISSN 1794-2489. https://doi.org/10.25058/20112742.n35.04.
Harry Haywood (1898-1985) was a prominent African-American communist, who -drawing from the understanding of racism as an essentially economic problem- argued that African-American population was treated as an ‘internal colony’, an idea he portrayed in his well-known work Negro Liberation (1948). However, this root of ‘internal colonialism’ notion in Black Marxisms has been disregarded by the Latin American school led by Pablo González Casanova and Rodolfo Stavenhagen, who assign it to American sociologist Charles Wright Mills in late 50s. This article presents a chronicle of a conversation on this and other related issues held by Haywood’s widow and American historian Gwendolyn, an emerita professor of Latin American and Caribbean History at Rutgers University and Michigan State University.
Keywords : Harry Haywood; Gwendolyn Midlo Hall,; internal colonialism; black marxism.