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Chicanos in the second half of the twentieth century collaborated
with African Americans, Asian Americans, and Native Americans to
appropriate the word colonial by situating their own
histories in the context of Third World liberation movements (Alcatraz
Reclaimed 1971; El Plan 1972; Ho 2000). Black
activists Stokely Carmichael and Charles Hamilton (1967, 56)
exemplify this mode of analysis in their book Black Power: The
Politics of Liberation in America: Black people are legal
citizens of the United States with, for the most part, the same
legal rights as other citizens. Yet they stand as colonial subjects
in relation to the white society. Thus institutional racism has
another name: colonialism. Obviously, the analogy is not perfect.
By acknowledging the imperfections of this internal colonization
argument at the very moment of formulating it, Carmichael and Hamilton
foreground both the difficulty and the importance of thinking the
keyword colonial in an international context.
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