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OUT OF OAKLAND: Contents
OUT OF OAKLAND
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Acknowledgments
Introduction: “Theory with No Practice Ain’t Shit”
1. “Every Brother on a Rooftop Can Quote Fanon”: Black Internationalism, 1955–1966
2. “Army 45 Will Stop All Jive”: Origins and Early Operations of the BPP, 1966–1967
3. “We’re Relating Right Now to the Third World”: Creating an Anticolonial Vernacular, 1967–1968
4. “I Prefer Panthers to Pigs”: Transnational and International Connections, 1968–1969
5. “Juche, Baby, All the Way”: Cuba, Algeria, and the Asian Strategy, 1969–1970
6. “Gangster Cigarettes” and “Revolutionary Intercommunalism”: Diverging Directions in Oakland and Algiers, 1970–1971
7. “Cosmopolitan Guerrillas”: The International Section and the RPCN, 1971–1973
8. The Panthers in Winter, 1971–1981
Epilogue: “Our Demand Is Simple: Stop Killing Us”: From Oakland to Ferguson
Notes
Index
About This Text
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: “Theory with No Practice Ain’t Shit”
1. “Every Brother on a Rooftop Can Quote Fanon”: Black Internationalism, 1955–1966
2. “Army 45 Will Stop All Jive”: Origins and Early Operations of the BPP, 1966–1967
3. “We’re Relating Right Now to the Third World”: Creating an Anticolonial Vernacular, 1967–1968
4. “I Prefer Panthers to Pigs”: Transnational and International Connections, 1968–1969
5. “Juche, Baby, All the Way”: Cuba, Algeria, and the Asian Strategy, 1969–1970
6. “Gangster Cigarettes” and “Revolutionary Intercommunalism”: Diverging Directions in Oakland and Algiers, 1970–1971
7. “Cosmopolitan Guerrillas”: The International Section and the RPCN, 1971–1973
8. The Panthers in Winter, 1971–1981
Epilogue: “Our Demand Is Simple: Stop Killing Us”: From Oakland to Ferguson
Notes
Index
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