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HISTORIC ERIC WILLIAMS BOOK REPUBLISHED
New
York, USA (June 11, 2006) — The Majority Press is
pleased to announce the launch of The Economic Future of the Caribbean
at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, June 23, 2006 at Long Island University –
Brooklyn Campus, 1 University Plaza, HS 107, Brooklyn, NY. Presented under
the auspices of the entire Caribbean Consular Corps –
Edited
in 1944 by Eric Williams, noted
historian, and E.
Franklin Frazier, one of African America’s most notable sociologists, the book comprises
the proceedings of a conference of the same name organized by Williams, then a
31-year-old Assistant Professor of Political and Social
Science at Howard
University, and a rising star in intellectual and activist circles.
Williams brought
together an eclectic and influential group of experts on the
With a Foreword by
Erica Williams Connell, daughter of Eric Williams, and a new Introduction by Tony Martin, Professor
of Africana Studies, Martin speculates on
Williams’ use of the Conference as
a major component of his strategy to gain employment in the Anglo-American
Caribbean Commission. He contends
that Williams already saw his scholarship as a prelude to his political career
and the Commission presented an unprecedented opportunity for him to make his
much-desired transition from academia to policy making.
Revealed here for the first time also is Williams’ employment as a
researcher with the Office of Strategic Services, immediate forerunner of the
United States Central Intelligence Agency.
Eric
Williams was awarded a
E.
Franklin Frazier, was Chairman of Howard University’s Division of Social
Sciences, which sponsored Williams’ 1943 Conference.
His several books include Black
Bourgeoisie and The Negro Family in the United States.
- EWMC -