The fundamental litmus test for American democracy-its economy, government, criminal justice system, education, mass media, and how broad and intense are the arbitrary powers used and deployed against black people. In this sense, the problem of the twenty-first century remains the problem of the color line. --from the new Preface
First published in 1993 on the one-year anniversary of the L.A. riots, Race Matters was a national best-seller, and it has since become a groundbreaking classic on race in America.
Race Matters contains West's most powerful essays on the issues relevant to black Americans despair, black conservatism, black-Jewish relations, myths about black sexuality, the crisis in leadership in the black community, and the legacy of Malcolm X. And the insights that he brings to these complicated problems remain fresh, exciting, creative, and compassionate. Now more than ever, Race Matters is a book for all Americans, as it helps us to build a genuine multiracial democracy in the new millennium.
clear and concise, demonstrates robust philosophical and sociopolitical diversity as well as a keen clarity toward the importance of the human soul; namely, love and passion
This is an excellent book that calls out all the evil of white supremacy and at the same time calls for a common humanity approach to tackling race issues. I highly recommend this book.
As a qualifier to this entire review, I listened to the audio book and I think that likely had a substantial impact on the reading experience. Whether for the worse or the better, I'm not entirely sure. The speaking was rather dry/monotone for the most part, which made me sleepy listening to it sometimes. Now for the content:
Dr. West goes over multiple facets of black identity and lived experience in America, opening every chapter with a reference to another black activist and something they've done or said in the past. While I don't remember any of the openings, I do remember enjoying what was said each time and it served as a reminder of the foundation black activists have built for current activists over quite some time through a variety of obstacles.
Education, work, politics, and race relations intersected often in the points made by West. Unfortunately, I didn't feel like anything really stuck. I definitely believe that, if I was black, I would have connected more with the work and remembered more. However, being a minority of a different race, I often connected with the overall sentiments and experiences West discussed, just not the specifics.
The one conversational point I do remember focused on the obstacles black academics have to deal with in America. You can rebel against the prominent institutions that provide a space for paid academic jobs at the cost of being forced to make your work more palatable to the white establishment, but that relegated you to doing mostly cheap, if not free, academic labor in smaller academic circles. This creates an ideological bubble for black academics at the top of the institutional pyramid, as well as an ideological bubble for those who reject the pyramid.
I appreciated what West had to say and think he's got a great understanding of the world, but I was not informed by this work much more than most other short form media I consume (news and articles).
The way in which Cornel West understands race is unlike anyone else. He brings a layer of honesty and nuance not commonly seen in the American race debate. While many understand race and oppression through the lens of historical, social, and structural violence, West takes these ideas a step further and presents a much more mature critique of how we talk about race in this country.
What makes West special is his willingness to not just criticize American conservatism but also critique the black community itself along with it’s allies. West’s views tend to be centered in anti imperialism and anti consumerism and it’s interesting to see how he relates the effects of these social forces to the growing loss of love and integrity he sees in America at large.
I really enjoyed this one, and as someone who is no stranger to African American philosophy, this still proved at times to be an uncomfortable reading that made me reevaluate how well I think I understand some of these issues.
The only thing I’d like to note before you read this one is that, contrary to what the title may imply, at times this book is less about explaining black oppression and more about laying a blueprint for future black leadership. This isn’t to say that if you’re white you won’t get anything out of this book, I believe I left this work better than when I started it, but it is to say that some sections are definitely more geared towards people of color rather than people trying to understand people of color. This wasn’t much of a surprise to me since I’ve read some of his other essays but this is something to know going into it.
In the end though this is an easy 5 stars. The only criticism I have is for the 25th anniversary edition, which is the one I read. This addition adds a new chapter at the beginning but after finishing I couldn’t help but feel like this new intro would have been better suited as a new epilogue at the end. Otherwise if you are wondering weather or not you should pick this one up and you’ve been interested in Cornel West’s work I highly recommend it. The perspective he gives to the reader is truly valuable and I’m very glad I got the chance to read this before my fall semester started.
While reading Cornel West Reader, I wanted to read his other material (essay format) and some parts I can easily relate to whether it was written to an audience of yesterday still is functional today. "Black people have always been in America's wilderness in search of a promised land. Yet many black folk (people) now reside in a jungle ruled by cutthroat market (US capitalism) morality devoid to any faith in deliverance or hope for freedom (page 25, Nihilism in Black America).
The essay on Malcolm X and Black Rage was pretty good (last chapter or section).
"...these desperate channels will produce a cold-hearted and mean spirited America no longer worth fighting for or living in. (116)" On page 25, West points out that Black American has always been in the wilderness seeking the promised land, except we live in a cutthroat market where morality devoid the hope for freedom, or faith. US is a capitalist country.
I am reading a copy on the shelf of C Library. 3.75/4 stars
Cornel West would probably not be offended if I pointed out that he doesn't quite have the literary talent of a W.E.B. Dubois... Who does? He doesn't have the fiery character of a Malcolm X. He comes across as someone sure of his ideas, but humble as an individual. His ideas are clear and generally well expressed, though his presentation does have a kind of dry style, like an academic essay assignment. The book does not have the kind of rigor to qualify as an analysis, and this isn't really philosophy. It's a plain-talking exposition of ideas, largely asserted or assumed, with a few explanatory examples and references to historical persons and ideas, but it isn't really argued out. Mr. West does his best to play fair by staking out ground that might bring together the right and the left, i.e. he aims to be non-partisan, though ultimately it's clear that he's coming from a Marxist perspective.
For my own purposes I'll try to note some of the controlling ideas that define the various chapters... okay, bullet points:
- The problems of black folks go beyond the narrow focus of liberals and conservatives on social structure or behavioral problems. First, it's not an either or, as structure and behavior go together and influence one another, second because cultural factors exist outside of political and economic structures... e.g., family, churches, etc., and most importantly it's time to face up to the psychological factors of lost hope and spiritual nihilism that dominate the lives of the poorest and most despairing people.
- We need love, self-respect, integrity, leadership, and values that go beyond the commercial values that have come to dominate.
- Black folks can't let the struggle simply be about getting black men the kind of power and dominance that white men have, to the detriment and neglect of black women, gay black men, and lesbians, and race identity and black nationalism can't trump moral and social issues of class, poverty, and human dignity.
- Black folks shouldn't be hornswaggled into supporting someone like Clarence Thomas who isn't qualified to serve on the supreme court, who doesn't represent black interests, who cynically plays the victim of racism to secure his own position and achieve his own ambition while condemning others for exploiting race... and support him just because of "racial reasoning"... i.e., he's black so hold together and support him, even in the face of abuse of black women (Anita Hill and Thomas's own sister whom he falsely blamed for welfare cheating...). Supporting such an unqualified individual represents an insecurity among black folks who unconsciously accept that we can't do better than this.
- Black intellectual and political leadership are at an all-time low, ironically due to the emergence of a larger black middle class (having gone from something like 7% to 25% of the black population), with the middle class seeking white acceptance and affirmation and pursuing their own individual betterment as defined by America's commercial values. Meanwhile what's really needed is community level leaders and grassroots organizers rather than leaders competing to become the voice of a national leader/savior.
- New black conservatives have emerged at least in part due to failures of liberals to directly address the real problems and to find an answer to the destructive despair and nihilism.
- Affirmative action is still supportable because racism is still real and present, the black folks who want to end affirmative action are the ones who have already benefited from it, but they want to win legitimacy among their white peers, and pragmatically, even if the issue relates more to class than race and gender, one can enforce rules that give opportunity to minorities and women, but if you just throw it down to trusting employers to use fair hiring practices with no accountability, racism and sexism can come back with a vengeance while employers claim color and gender blindness. There's no evidence to suggest racism in hiring has really abated.
- Black anti-semitism and Jewish racism against blacks are destructive to both interests, they have a long history, coalitions and cooperation should be fostered, and there are many reasons for recent conflict between Jews and blacks, including the rise of political conservatism among Jews, their opposition to affirmative action, their social and political rise in America which outstripped the rise of blacks in the same time, the failure of black leaders to strongly condemn black anti-semitism, the fact that blacks are somewhat blind to the very long history of European violent anti-semitism, plus Jews support unjust practices of Israel regarding Palestinians while blacks don't understand the Jewish sense of urgency towards self-preservation.... i.e., both blacks and Jews are caught up in racial reasoning rather than larger issues of social justice... heck there's more to this...
And, in an effort to conclude my summary by addressing the final two topics:
-Black sexuality is a taboo topic that should be addressed openly and not feared if progress is to be made. Mythology about black sexuality is damaging. Fear and fascination with black sexuality, and especially interracial sexual relations are at the core of racial conflicts. Black people confront many contradictory problems relating to how they may be degraded, or made to feel ashamed or dirty, while at the same time being objects of sexual fascination for white folks. Black folks have to be proud, not ashamed, and at the same time willing to accept a variety of expressions and sexual identities, without enforcing images of machismo on all black men. Men and women must rise together. Healthy sexual relations should be embraced whether intra-racial, inter-racial, hetero- or homosexual. At the same time, the author cautions in several places about the harmful effects of the commodification of sex, instant-gratification culture, and hedonism. Maybe I'm not getting this quite right, so I'll just quote the final thoughts on this topic from the book:
As long as black sexuality remains a taboo subject, we cannot acknowledge, examine, or engage these tragic psychocultural facts of American life. Furthermore, our refusal to do so limits our ability to confront the overwhelming realities of the AIDS epidemic in America in general and in black America in particular. Although the dynamics of black male sexuality differ from those of black female sexuality, new stylistic options of self-image and resistance can be forged only when black women and men do so together. This is not so because all black people should be heterosexual or with black partners, but rather because all black people—including black children of so-called "mixed" couples—are affected deeply by the prevailing myths of black sexuality. These myths are part of a wider network of white supremacist lies whose authority and legitimacy must be undermined. In the long run, there is simply no way out for all of us other than living out the truths we proclaim about genuine humane interaction in our psychic and sexual lives. Only by living against the grain can we keep alive the possibility that the visceral feelings about black bodies fed by racist myths and promoted by market-driven quests for stimulation do not forever render us obsessed with sexuality and fearful of each other's humanity.
-There's also a fair amount about Malcolm X. The author saw a lot of unfulfilled potential in Malcolm X, whose strong expression of rage was focused on a psychological transformation in black people, but who tragically could not live long enough to mature and examine the implications of his approach. The author saw Malcolm X as starting to transcend national boundaries, and overcoming some of the unfortunate tendency of Nation of Islam to respond to white-nationalist power by adopting the same underlying formula i.e., by focusing too much on white power, it ironically kept white culture as the dominant force and turned black nationalism into a reactionary movement. The author believed Malcolm would have gone beyond this in promoting black pride on its own terms, speaking out with appropriate rage to white abuses, but not allowing white culture to define the movement. He also commented on the fact that, still young, Malcolm in his more orthodox Muslim phase, could not yet transcend racial reasoning enough to be able to see the broader social justice issues, i.e., he could not criticize the patriarchal oppression of women and the anti-democratic culture of Arabia, while he experienced the positive humanizing experience of being accepted as a black man.
Now, this is all my sloppy effort at summarizing, I probably misrepresented something, and if you've read this far and think I got something wrong, tell me!