Radical Sovereignty
About the Author
Table of Contents
Contents
List of Figures
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Part One. Mexico City (1923–1929)
1. "Our Internationalism"
2. Against Empire
3. Anti-Imperial Rifts
Part Two. Moscow/Buenos Aires/The Caribbean/Lima (1928–1932)
4. Black Radicals, Bolsheviks, and Self-Determination
5. Race, Class, and the Making of the Present
6. Continental Nationalism
Part Three. Cuba/Mexico (1932–1940)
7. Another Country
8. A Plural Nation
Epilogue: Afterlives
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Reviews
— H-Net“The author’s accessible writing will reach both specialist and curious readers, including non-Arabic speakers. The great strength of the book is to make the voices of these women heard and their work understood and known by both an academic and a general readership.”
"Wood draws a vivid picture of Latin America’s architects of liberation, those who forged an anti-imperialist and anti-racist path to sovereignty and whose legacy was 1960s internationalism."—Tanalís Padilla, author of Unintended Lessons of Revolution: Student Teachers and Political Radicalism in Twentieth-Century Mexico
"Wood provides a clear-headed investigation of Latin America’s Communist and anti-imperialist left, its efforts to forge a global revolutionary agenda, and its debates around race, class, and nation."—Karin Rosemblatt, author of The Science and Politics of Race in Mexico and the United States, 1910–1950
