Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Introduction
-
1 Blacks in the U.S. Diplomatic and Consular Services, 1869–1924 -
2 A New Negro Foreign Policy -
3 Carl Rowan and the Dilemma of Civil Rights, Propaganda, and the Cold War -
4 Reconstruction’s Revival -
5 White Shame/Black Agency -
6 Goodwill Ambassadors -
7 The Paradox of Jazz Diplomacy -
8 African American Representatives in the United Nations -
9 Obama, African Americans, and Africans - Epilogue
- Contributors
- Index
- Production Credits
Title Pages
Title Pages
- Source:
- African Americans in U.S. Foreign Policy
- Publisher:
- University of Illinois Press
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- Title Pages
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Introduction
-
1 Blacks in the U.S. Diplomatic and Consular Services, 1869–1924 -
2 A New Negro Foreign Policy -
3 Carl Rowan and the Dilemma of Civil Rights, Propaganda, and the Cold War -
4 Reconstruction’s Revival -
5 White Shame/Black Agency -
6 Goodwill Ambassadors -
7 The Paradox of Jazz Diplomacy -
8 African American Representatives in the United Nations -
9 Obama, African Americans, and Africans - Epilogue
- Contributors
- Index
- Production Credits