Color and Democracy: Colonies and Peace
- New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1945
New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1945. Very Good/Very Good. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1945. Later (1946) Printing. Octavo (19cm.); publisher's cloth in red price-clipped dust jacket; [8],143pp. Ex-library with manuscript shelf label taped to jacket and cloth spine feet, otherwise free of markings; dust jacket a bit chipped and rubbed along extremities with small loss at spine crown, spine panel faded, heavy uneven foxing to jacket verso, front hinge starting, else a Very Good, internally clean and sound copy of a scarce late Du Bois work.
Written shortly after the end of World War II when the author was serving as Director of Special Research for the NAACP, "Color and Democracy" delineates the ways in which democracy and the right to progress are the only ways in which peace can be guaranteed and in order for that to happen, colonial powers must be dismantled.
APTHEKER 1967.
Written shortly after the end of World War II when the author was serving as Director of Special Research for the NAACP, "Color and Democracy" delineates the ways in which democracy and the right to progress are the only ways in which peace can be guaranteed and in order for that to happen, colonial powers must be dismantled.
APTHEKER 1967.