Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Claudia Jones, International Thinker

View through CrossRef
AbstractThis article analyses the early international thought of Trinidad-born Marxist journalist Claudia Jones. We focus on a neglected aspect of Jones's intellectual production in the United States: her interrogation of geopolitics in her Weekly Review articles in the early 1940s. We situate Jones in relation to the contemporary popularization of geopolitical thought in this period, reading her alongside another neglected figure in histories of international thought, the African American geopolitical scholar and diplomatic historian Merze Tate. Jones read together the geopolitical, class, racialized, and anticolonial implications of the expanding Nazi empire, positioning her at the forefront of Marxist theoretical innovation in this period. Moving beyond studies of canonical texts and white male thinkers in international intellectual history, we build on black women's intellectual history to center a black working-class woman's popular theorizing of international relations.
Title: Claudia Jones, International Thinker
Description:
AbstractThis article analyses the early international thought of Trinidad-born Marxist journalist Claudia Jones.
We focus on a neglected aspect of Jones's intellectual production in the United States: her interrogation of geopolitics in her Weekly Review articles in the early 1940s.
We situate Jones in relation to the contemporary popularization of geopolitical thought in this period, reading her alongside another neglected figure in histories of international thought, the African American geopolitical scholar and diplomatic historian Merze Tate.
Jones read together the geopolitical, class, racialized, and anticolonial implications of the expanding Nazi empire, positioning her at the forefront of Marxist theoretical innovation in this period.
Moving beyond studies of canonical texts and white male thinkers in international intellectual history, we build on black women's intellectual history to center a black working-class woman's popular theorizing of international relations.

Related Results

Allergies, allegiances and authenticity: Bill T. Jones’s choreography for Broadway
Allergies, allegiances and authenticity: Bill T. Jones’s choreography for Broadway
The critical reception of Bill T. Jones’s choreography for the Broadway stage reinvigorates debates about high and low cultural production and reveals persistent critical biases re...
Gabe Jones
Gabe Jones
Introduced in the 1963 Marvel comic Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos, Gabe Jones is ‘one of the first “normal” black people in comics. […] I mean not a racist caricature’, in th...
The Via Claudia Nova
The Via Claudia Nova
At the period when, after a process of development extending over almost five centuries, the road-system of ancient Italy had attained to its maturity, we find that Rome was connec...
“Satan is Black” – Frantz Fanon’s Juridico-Theology of Racialisation and Damnation
“Satan is Black” – Frantz Fanon’s Juridico-Theology of Racialisation and Damnation
Recent critical legal scholarship has shown the significance of colonialism for emergence of modern international law.1 Paralleling, sometimes interweaving, with this post-colonial...
Description Benefits, Production Benefits, and Context Retrieval for Recognition of Unfamiliar Faces
Description Benefits, Production Benefits, and Context Retrieval for Recognition of Unfamiliar Faces
Abstract Several studies have shown that giving brief descriptions for unfamiliar faces can lead to better episodic recognition memory relative to faces in a view-on...
David Jones's ‘Barbaric-Fetish’: Frazer and the ‘Aesthetic Value’ of the Liturgy
David Jones's ‘Barbaric-Fetish’: Frazer and the ‘Aesthetic Value’ of the Liturgy
Much recent critical interest in the relationship between modernism and religion has concerned itself with the occult, spiritualism, and theosophy as opposed to institutional relig...
Die Dag van die Here in <i>As Silo kom</i> van Hennie Jones
Die Dag van die Here in <i>As Silo kom</i> van Hennie Jones
The Day of the Lord in As Silo kom (When Silo comes) by Hennie JonesAs Silo kom (When Silo comes) by Hennie Jones is an important novel in view of the fact that biblical themes lik...
Revitalised Early Christian Just War Thinking and International Law: Some Observations on Nigel Biggar’s In Defence of War
Revitalised Early Christian Just War Thinking and International Law: Some Observations on Nigel Biggar’s In Defence of War
In light of the well-established international legal principle of non-use of force in international relations, Nigel Biggar’s In Defence of War may give rise to concern in the acad...

Back to Top