Davis, Joshua C.2017-10-252017-10-252016-09-19Davis, J. C. (2016). Una Mulzac, Black Women Booksellers, and Pan-Africanism. AAIHS, 1-5.http://hdl.handle.net/11603/7376Una Mulzac wanted to make a career for herself in the literary world. It was the early 1960s, and the most common way of breaking into publishing was to secure an entry-level position at a major press in Manhattan. Mulzac found work at Random House as a secretary—but within a few years she became bored with her desk job. Instead of looking for a position with another publisher in New York, Mulzac emigrated to British Guiana, in early 1963. There, she joined the People’s Progressive Party (PPP), an anti-colonial group pushing for Guyanese independence led by Cheddi Jagan, an American-educated, ethnic Indian Marxist who served for three years as the colony’s Premier.5 pagesen-USpan-africanismblack women booksellersblack internationalismblack politicscaribbean civil rightsUna Mulzac, Black Women Booksellers, and Pan-AfricanismText