Written by Anthony Monteiro | |
Charles Pete Banner-Haley's book From Du Bois to Obama: African American Intellectuals in the Public Forum (2010) is a history of African American intellectuals from the standpoint of Barack Obama's presidency. From an Obama post-racial dream-world, Banner-Haley tells us, "African American intellectuals in the twenty-first century can take their cue from an Obama presidency and the words he spoke in Philadelphia during the race for the nomination. They can become "transformative black intelligentsia' (123)." It should be obvious, the last thing black intellectuals need to do is "take their cue" from a pro-war, pro-Wall Street, pro-American-imperialism presidency. Rather than fulfilling the legacy of W.E.B Du Bois (as the author claims) it is its opposite. Obama's presidency represents a rupture with Du Bois and the progressive wing of black intellectuals. Obama's Philadelphia speech was a neo-Booker T. Washington compromise speech (equivalent to Washington's Atlanta Compromise Address delivered in 1895). Obama decidedly argued that we had moved beyond racism's most lethal forms. While slavery was the nation's "original sin," racism left blacks and whites scarred. Hence, his white grandmother and Reverend Jeremiah Wright evidenced racial prejudice, stereotypes, fear, animus and anger. He positioned himself as representing the future of racial compromise and reconciliation. In neo-Booker T. Washington style he urged black folk literally to "cast your buckets down where you are," instead of challenging white supremacy. Obama, and by implication Banner-Haley, accept the neo-liberal position that the major problems confronting black folk are rooted in black culture, psychology and behaviors, especially of the poor. The author says Obama gravitated to Harvard sociologist William Julius Wilson's "synthetic analysis" that drew from both political liberalism and right wing conservatism. Wilson claims that since 1968 we have been in a period of the "declining significance of race". American liberalism reached its high point in the 1930's with the Presidency of Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. Since the 1980's American democracy has become more right wing and more authoritarian and liberalism has become increasingly neo-liberal rationalizations of American empire. The banks, Wall Street and the military have undermined most avenues of democracy, including elections. August 25, 2010 http://blackagendareport.com/?q=content/du-bois-obama-african-american-intellectuals-public-forum |
Sunday, October 3, 2010
To speak the truth
Obama and the Crisis of Neo-Liberal Black Intellectuals
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