Claude McKay: “Soviet Russia and the Negro”

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Claude McKay:“Soviet Russia and the Negro”
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Abstract

Claude McKay was a Black Jamaican writer living in the United States who traveled at various times to the United Kingdom, Russia, Morocco, and France. His essays and poetry were often met with criticism, mainly because those reviewing his work were white. When McKay visited Moscow in 1922 and 1923, during the fifth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, he was greeted with a different attitude, however. At the Fourth Congress of the Communist International held in Moscow, McKay was asked to unofficially represent the Black Americans. He stressed that he was treated with respect and dignity and painted a favorable picture of Soviet Russia.

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