Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Marcus Garvey's 'Africa For The Africans': Realistic?. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. To question the realistic value of Marcus Garvey's objective in 'Africa for the Africans' is to remove the last thread of cultural identity an otherwise intermingled African-American population has to its roots. The extent to which Garvey's quest to preserve Africa as the one last place on earth where blacks can truly associate with their ancestry is both grand and far-reaching; that he has received tremendous support from other outspoken prominent African-Americans speaks to the reasonable assertion that Africa should – and can – be safeguarded for its indigenous peoples. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCGarveyAf.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that have long eluded its indigenous population. However, the extent of political, social and economic manipulation Africa has experienced over time has created the need for immediate and unadulterated
retaliation whereby Africans may once again retain possession of the native soil that continues to be stripped from them, and Garveys approach is the most realistic way for it to
be done. To question the realistic value of Marcus Garveys objective in Africa for the Africans is to remove the last thread of cultural identity an otherwise intermingled African-American population
has to its roots. The extent to which Garveys quest to preserve Africa as the one last place on earth where blacks can truly associate with their ancestry is
both grand and far-reaching; that he has received tremendous support from other outspoken prominent African-Americans speaks to the reasonable assertion that Africa should - and can - be safeguarded for
its indigenous peoples. "...The numerous books and other publications by Tony Martin, Robert A. Hill, Emory Tolbert, and others documenting the overwhelming response of U.S. African Americans to Marcus
Garveys Universal Negro Improvement Association and his plans to preserve Africa for the Africans have demonstrated how deeply rooted the attachment to Africa has been in African American history and
culture" (Franklin 327). Garveys vision may have been - and still appears to be - grandiose to some, but his dedication to African heritage and the people who have
since become a hyphenated subgroup of myriad societies reaches far beyond what many believe to be within the boundaries of realistic aspiration. Indeed, seemingly unattainable dreams and goals are
what fuel the very nature of progress; without the constant gaze toward ambition to achieve what naysayers claim to be unachievable, the human species would not exist in the capacity
...