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A Pan-Africanist who defied conventional Marxism to recast anti-colonial history

By Harsh Thakor* 
On 4 January 2026, the 125th birth anniversary of Cyril Lionel Robert James marked a moment to reflect on the life and ideas of a major figure in Marxist, Pan-Africanist and anti-colonial thought. Born in 1901 in Tunapuna, Trinidad, James spent his life linking the struggles of Black and colonised peoples to the wider project of working-class emancipation. His work challenged Eurocentric interpretations of Marxism by asserting that colonial rebellions and Black resistance movements were central catalysts for global revolutionary change.
James held that the revolutionary energy of the oppressed, particularly Black workers in both colonies and industrial centres, was decisive for dismantling imperialism. His approach rejected the view that Marxism belonged primarily to industrial Europe and brought to the forefront the lived experience, cultural expression, and political organising of colonised people. His landmark work, The Black Jacobins, placed the Haitian Revolution at the heart of world revolutionary history and remains widely read for demonstrating that enslaved Africans shaped the modern world through their own agency.
His early life in Trinidad exposed him to the contradictions of British colonial education. While immersed in Western literature, he lived under a system that denied political rights to the majority. James moved to England in 1932, where he became involved in radical politics and helped form the International African Service Bureau alongside George Padmore and others. These engagements shaped his synthesis of Marxist internationalism with uncompromising anti-imperialism.
James was a distinctive and sometimes contentious interpreter of Marxism. He rejected Leninist concepts of vanguard parties and democratic centralism, instead advocating decentralised workers’ power, spontaneity, and self-organisation. He argued that the Soviet Union represented state capitalism rather than socialism and maintained that Black struggles and racial oppression were integral—not supplementary—to understanding capitalism. His emphasis on culture and popular experience, including cricket, broadened the scope of Marxist analysis beyond economic structures.
Much of James’s political activity took place in the United States, where he contributed to Marxist debates within the Socialist Workers Party and later co-founded the Johnson-Forest Tendency. The group emphasised rank-and-file workplace resistance and the autonomous power of ordinary workers. His writings in this period, including The American Worker, documented everyday shop-floor defiance and framed it as evidence of latent revolutionary capacity.
James’s life was marked by achievements as well as contradictions. He opposed hierarchy in politics yet often relied on informal networks of support. His personal life was turbulent, and his relationships suffered from his obsessive commitment to political work. He was at various times impoverished, undocumented, or facing deportation, but continued writing, organising and influencing others. He counted among his acquaintances figures such as Leon Trotsky, Kwame Nkrumah, Paul Robeson and Stokely Carmichael, and was present for key moments in anti-colonial and civil rights struggles. He also played a significant role in Pan-Africanist organising, contributing to the 1945 Fifth Pan-African Congress and mentoring democratic anti-colonial leaders.
James’s cultural contributions were substantial. He viewed literature, music and sport not as diversions but as expressions of collective creativity. Beyond a Boundary broke new ground by examining cricket as a site of colonial power, identity formation and working-class assertion. It is widely regarded as one of the finest books on the sport and helped inaugurate serious intellectual study of popular culture within postcolonial societies.
Among James’s most influential works, The Black Jacobins remains foundational for the study of slave revolts, colonialism and revolutionary transformation. It portrayed the Haitian Revolution as a pivotal historical event driven by enslaved people themselves, countering narratives that marginalised their role. Other major works include World Revolution 1917–1936, Notes on Dialectics, and Mariners, Renegades and Castaways, written during his detention on Ellis Island. Taken together, these contributions helped shape modern understandings of Marxism, colonialism, race and culture.
James spent his later years moving between Britain, Ghana, and Trinidad, gaining belated recognition for his work. He witnessed the dismantling of European colonial empires and remained intellectually engaged until his death in 1989. Observing the protests in China that year, he predicted the imminent collapse of Soviet influence in Eastern Europe—a judgement that proved prescient.
Across nearly seven decades, C. L. R. James expanded the boundaries of Marxist thought, insisting that the voices of the oppressed belonged at the centre of world history. His writings and political activism reoriented understandings of revolution, working-class agency and anti-colonial struggle, leaving a legacy that continues to inform debates on liberation, democracy and race.
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*Freelance journalist

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