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    <titleInfo>
        <title>W. E. B. Du Bois’ Ambiguous Politics of Liberation: Race, Marxism and Pan Africanism</title>
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    <name type="personal">
        <namePart type="family">Gearey</namePart>
        <namePart type="given">Adam</namePart>
        <role>
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    <name type="corporate">
        <namePart>Columbia University. Law</namePart>
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        <dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf" keyDate="yes">2012</dateIssued>
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    <abstract>W. E. B. Du Bois summons the restless and provocative spirit of a Pan Africanism that, despite its association with the collapse of Kwamah Nkumah&apos;s Ghanaian revolution, has not failed as an idea. Commentators have realised, to some extent, the ambiguities of Du Bois&apos; Pan Africanism. However, they have not shown how Du Bois&apos; deployment of the concept opens up a more radical political thinking. This Essay will trace the various twists and turns of Du Bois&apos; Pan Africanism as narrated in the text Dusk of Dawn. Pan Africanism demands a social, economic, and political revolution that goes beyond the civil liberties struggle and its focus on constitutional recognition. In leaving America for Ghana, Du Bois committed himself to a very specific understanding of the African revolution. Using the ideas of Etienne Balibar and Jacques Rancière, this Essay will argue that Du Bois&apos; Pan Africanism evoked energies of revolution that point at an unfinished, rather than failed, radical project.</abstract>
    <subject>
        <topic>African American studies</topic>
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            <title>Columbia Journal of Race and Law</title>
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            <detail type="volume">
                <number>1</number>
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            <detail type="issue">
                <number>3</number>
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            <extent unit="page">
                <start>265</start>
                <end>272</end>
            </extent>
            <date>2012-07</date>
        </part>
        <identifier type="issn">2155-2401</identifier>
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    <identifier type="hdl">http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:15005</identifier>
    
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        <recordCreationDate encoding="w3cdtf">2012-10-20 00:33:56 -0400</recordCreationDate>
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