NUBIAN ARTS
Issue #9
December 20th 2003
The Majority Press Book Release:
"The Economic Future of the Caribbean"
April 2004. For immediate release. Historic Book by Eric Williams and E. Franklin Frazier Republished
The Majority Press announces the publication of The Economic Future of the
Caribbean, edited by Eric Williams, former prime minister of Trinidad and
Tobago and E. Franklin Frazier, African America's distinguished
sociologist. This book, now almost forgotten, was first published in 1944
and is now republished for the first time in sixty years. It carries a
foreword by Erica Williams Connell, daughter of Eric Williams and founder
of the Eric Williams Memorial
Collection at the University of the West Indies in Trinidad.
In 1943 Dr. Eric Williams, a thirty-one year old Assistant Professor of
Political and Social Science at Howard University, organized a conference
on “The Economic Future of the Caribbean.” Williams, a rising star in
intellectual and activist circles, brought together an eclectic and
influential group of experts to debate the conference theme. Speakers
included advocates of independence for Puerto Rico, leaders of the
pro-democracy movement among
Caribbean Americans, scholars, diplomats and the top brass of the British
and United States sections of the newly-formed Anglo-American Caribbean
Commission. Participants discussed the dominance of sugar throughout the
region, the need for agricultural diversification, the fisheries industry
and the media. They also examined race relations, the future of
colonialism and the prospects for Caribbean federation. The proceedings
were published under the editorship of Williams and E. Franklin Frazier,
Professor of Sociology and Chairman of the Division of
Social Sciences at Howard.
In a new introduction to the current reprint of the conference
proceedings, Tony Martin for the first time reveals Williams' use of this
conference as a major component of his strategy to gain employment in the
Anglo-American Caribbean Commission. Williams already saw his scholarship
as merely a prelude to a political career and the Anglo-American Caribbean
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 with
the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), immediate forerunner of the United
States' Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
Eric Williams won a Trinidad and Tobago island scholarship, graduated at
the top of his undergraduate class at Oxford University and obtained a D.
Phil. from Oxford in 1938. He was successively chief minister, premier and
prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago from 1956 to 1981. In academic
circles he is best known as author of Capitalism and Slavery, one of the
outstanding historical works of the twentieth century.
E. Franklin Frazier, the distinguished sociologist, was chairman of Howard University's Division of Social Sciences, which sponsored Williams' 1943 conference. His several books included Black Bourgeoisie and The Negro Family in the United States.
Tony Martin is Professor of Africana Studies at Wellesley College,
Massachusetts.
The Economic Future of the Caribbean. Eric Williams and E. Franklin Frazier (Eds). ISBN 0-912469-37-4. 2004. X+144pp. US$19.95(paper).
Orders: Tel: 1.978.342.9676; Fax: 1.978.348.1233; Email:Orders@pssc.com. Administration: Tel/Fax:
1.508.533.4497, Email:tmpress@earthlink.net . www.themajoritypress.net
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