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THE IMPORTANCE OF SYMBOLIC AND CULTURAL POLITICS IN THE MARCUS GARVEY MOVEMENT
Author(s) -
Doug Gutknecht
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
social thought and research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2469-8466
pISSN - 1094-5830
DOI - 10.17161/str.1808.4898
Subject(s) - appeal , ideology , politics , the symbolic , sociology , movement (music) , order (exchange) , white (mutation) , gender studies , political economy , political science , law , aesthetics , psychology , psychoanalysis , philosophy , biochemistry , chemistry , finance , economics , gene
This research incorporates interdisciplinary data in order to discuss the Marcus Garvey Movement which emerged in the urban North during the World War I era. The importance of symbolic and cultural politics for Garvey's appeal to newly arriving, often uneducated and uttskilled northern urban Blacks, is elaborated. Such forms of symbolic communication and politics, along with Garvey's inability to anticipate repression and other macro-structural issues and conditions, created intense conflicts with potential allies, as well as his own fol lowers. Garvey's form of ideological or symbolic politics pro vided short run successes in the recruitment of poor, relatively uneducated segments of the Harlem community to his racial struggle. However, in the long run, Garvey failed to provide leadership and tactical direction for a sustained broad based movement for racial equality.

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