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Index
Acknowledgments
Author Biographies
Preface
Section 1: Introduction
1. Introduction
Amílcar Cabral and the Struggle of Memory Against Forgetting ( Firoze Manji and Bill Fletcher Jr .)
Section 2: The Legacy of Amílcar Cabral
2. No Easy Victories
Some Reflections on Amílcar Cabral’s Legacy ( Nigel C. Gibson )
3. Class Suicide
The Petit Bourgeoisie and the Challenges of Development ( Samir Amin )
4. Amilcar Cabral and the Pan-african Revolution ( Ameth Lo )
5. Amilcar Cabral
An Agronomist Before His Time ( Carlos Schwarz )
6. The Cabral Era
Strategic and Foreign Policy Objectives ( Richard A. Lobban, Jr .)
7. The Weapon of Theory
Amílcar Cabral and Africana Critical Theory ( Reiland Rabaka )
8. “Weapons of Theory”
Employing Amílcar Cabral in the Present ( Nigel Westmaas )
9. Sons of the Soil
Cabral and Saramago ( Grant Farred )
10. Cabral
His Thoughts and Actions in the Context of Our Time ( Mustafah Dhada )
11. In the Space of Amílcar Cabral ( Helmi Sharawy )
12. ‘The Cancer of Betrayal, which We Must Uproot from Afrika …’ ( Aziz Salmone Fall )
Section 3: Reflections on Cabral
13. To Want and to Live
Thoughts for Today, Inspired by Amílcar Cabral ( Lewis R. Gordon )
14. Cabral and the Dispossession (Dehumanization) of Humanity (Jacques Depelchin )
15. Thinking with Our Own Heads and Walking with Our Own Feet
Interview with Augusta Henriques and Miguel Barros of Tiniguena, ( Molly Kane )
16. The Significance Today of the Charismatic Figure, Amílcar Cabral ( Filomeno Lopes )
17. On Shooting the Body and Not the Shadow
Honouring and Learning from Cabral Forty Years Later ( Wangui Kimari )
18. Amílcar Cabral: With Us Today ( Adrian Harewood )
19. Revolutionary Democracy, Class-Consciousness, and Cross-Class Movement Building
Lessons from Amílcar Cabral ( Maria Poblet )
20. Telling No Lies is Not Easy
A Reflection on Following Cabral’s Watchwords ( William Minter )
21. Amílcar Cabral
Tribute to an Original and Revolutionary Thinker ( Demba Moussa Dembélé )
Section 4: Cabral, Women, and Emancipation
22. “But We Have to Fight Twice”
Reflections on the Contribution of Amílcar Cabral to the Liberation of Women ( Stephanie Urdang )
23. From Theory to Practice
Amílcar Cabral and Guinean Women in the Fight for Emancipation ( Patrícia Godinho Gomes )
Section 5: Cabral and the Pan-Africanists
24. Walter Rodney and Amílcar Cabral
Common Commitments and Connected Praxi ( Patricia Rodney, Asha Rodney, Jesse Benjamin, Hashim Gibril, and Senai Abraha )
25. Class and Struggle
Cabral, Rodney, and the Complexities of Culture in Africa ( David Austin )
26. Remembering Cabral Today ( Amrit Wilson )
27. Cabral’s Theory of Struggle and Caribbean Revolutionary Parallels ( Perry Mars )
28. Amílcar Cabral and Pan-Africanism ( Explo Nani-Kofi )
Section 6: Cabral, Culture, and Education
29. Cabral, Culture, Progress, and the Metaphysics of Difference ( Olúfémi Táíwò )
30. Cabral and Freire
The Importance of Cultural Capital in Rebuilding a Successful Education System in Guinea-Bissau ( Brandon Lundy )
31. Cabral, Culture, and Education ( N. Barney Pityana )
32. RAP KRIOL(U)
The Pan-Africanism of Cabral in the Music of the Youth ( Miguel de Barros and Redy Wilson Lima )
Section 7: Cabral and African American Struggles
33. Amílcar Cabral and the Transformation of the African American Left in the United States ( Bill Fletcher, Jr .)
34. Linking the Struggles
Amílcar Cabral and His Impact and Legacy in the Black Liberation Movement ( Kali Akuno )
35. Praxis from the Centre Back to the Margins
Amílcar Cabral’s Method as a Guide for Reconstructing the Radical Black Political Subject ( Ajamu Baraka )
36. Cabral, Black Liberation, and Cultural Struggle ( Makungu M. Akinyela )
37. The Black Panther Party, African Liberation, and Amílcar Cabral ( Walter Turner )
38. Memories Of Black Liberation
Amílcar Cabral ( Angela Davis )
Select Bibliography
Compiled by Chris Webb, Jean-Pierre Diouf and Firoze Manji
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