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Kwame Nkrumah and Pan-Africanism’s High Tide: A Conversation with Howard W. French

Dec 20, 2025
Howard W. French, a seasoned journalist and author, explores the compelling life of Kwame Nkrumah and the impact of Pan-Africanism on global Black identity. He discusses Nkrumah’s transformative journey from humble beginnings in Ghana to a leadership role in African liberation. French sheds light on the often-overlooked narratives of Black internationalism and critiques the authoritarian aspects of Nkrumah's governance. He also touches on the influence of Harlem's vibrant culture on Nkrumah and previews his upcoming work on mid-century Black musical creativity.
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ANECDOTE

Accidental Path Into Foreign Reporting

  • Howard French describes his accidental path into journalism after living in Ivory Coast and meeting a West Africa correspondent who encouraged him to pitch stories.
  • That early freelance work led to paid assignments and a career as a foreign correspondent covering coups and crises.
INSIGHT

Reframing Emancipation As Two-Part Struggle

  • The 'Second Emancipation' reframes African decolonization as a continued struggle after abolition that sought real sovereignty, not just flags and anthems.
  • Howard French links African independence and US civil rights as intertwined movements that completed emancipation across different eras and geographies.
INSIGHT

Books Form A Connected Historical Trilogy

  • Born In Blackness set French on a trajectory to tell interconnected histories of Africa and the diaspora, leading to this focused study of mid-20th-century Pan-Africanism.
  • The Second Emancipation concentrates on roughly the last 75–80 years with necessary prehistory to explain Pan-Africanism's rise.
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