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"When Sleeping Women Wake" is a novel about three multi-generational African-American women who discover that to heal they must share with one another their negative emotional experiences at the hands of society, family members and men. They learn that, together, women can move mountains.
The February 24, 1966 overthrow of the progressive, socialist government of Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah proved to be a deathblow to all people of African descent. Nkrumah called for a Union of African Socialist States, the only permanent solution for the exploitation and oppression of African people worldwide. How much better the African world would be today for all African people had he continued to struggle for Pan-Africanism! KWAME NKRUMAH IS ALIVE AND WELL! is a historical and speculative work of fiction that examines the challenges that Nkrumah and African Revolutionaries around the world would have faced had the coup d'etat not occurred. It also offers suggestions for all those interested in continuing the quest for Pan-Africanism: the complete liberation and unification of Africa under socialism. Forward ever, Backward never! COVER PHOTOGRAPH FROM INFORMATION SERVICES, MINISTRY OF INFORMATION, ACCRA, GHANA.
Letters from Stokely Carmichael, Grace and James Boggs, Julia Wright, Shirley Graham DuBois and others make this volume invaluable for Nkrumaists worldwide. For Pan-Africanists everywhere and for those concerned about the present and future welfare of all people of African descent, these additional Kwame Nkrumah Conakry letters will prove inspirational.
The interviews included here reflect the dedication of those who knew, worked with, and served with Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah. They either struggled to ensure that our youth were politically educated or they struggled to prepare themselves to take the helm to guide Africa toward Pan-Africanism: a completely liberated, unified, and socialist Africa--the only objective that will guarantee the permanent liberation of all African people and their descendants no matter where they happen to be born or to live.
In this critical work, the author spotlights some of the autobiographical kernels in Morrison's novels and a study of the novels, demonstrating that each is a thematic and structural offshoot of the preceding one, evidencing a pattern of growth in Morrison's consciousness of the exploitation and oppression of people of African descent.
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