The first complete account of the life and work of Wilfred Adolphus Domingo (1889-1968), one of the most significant West Indian anti-colonialists of the twentieth century.
When W. A. Domingo died in 1968, the Jamaican ex-premier Norman Manley wrote that ‘no one in the world made greater sacrifices or suffered more for the cause he believed in—the cause of freedom for Jamaica and our escape from the bonds and fetters of British Imperialism.’ Despite this claim, Domingo has remained a shadowy figure. This book brings him, at last, into the foreground of anti-colonial struggle in the Caribbean.
The book looks at Domingo’s ideological tenets and political commitments at various stages in his life. Each section contains a substantial introduction followed by a selection of Domingo’s writings, including new biographical information which sheds light on Domingo’s early years as well as on his relationships with Marcus Garvey and the Communist movement.
Table des matières
Introduction
Part 1. A New Day: Harlem 1917-1935
Part 2. Seeking Freedom: Jamaica 1936-1947
Part 3. True Patriotism: Against Federation 1948-1964
Conclusion
List of W. A. Domingo’s writings
Index
A propos de l’auteur
Leslie James is Senior Lecturer in Global History at Queen Mary University London. She is the author of George Padmore and Decolonization from Below and editor of C.L.R. James’s Nkrumah and the Ghana Revolution. She lives in London.