'This book has all the freshness, all the spontaneity of good
conversations anywhere, and benefits greatly from the integrity and
wisdom of its contributors.' --McKay Jenkins, The Star-Ledger,
Newark
'This is not a book for the faint-hearted. . . . Cornel West, an
authentic, brilliant and prophetic black voice, deals squarely and
directly with America's problems of race, recommending changes in
behavior and attitude among blacks as well as whites, prescribing
solutions difficult to attain, but no more difficult than
perpetuation of the status quo.' --Melvyn Schreiber, County Daily
News, Galveston, Texas
'West manages to extract something from each [contributor]. His
intellectual exuberance flavors the book, and the conversations
reveal important truths about our racial impasse.' --In These Times
'This book has all the freshness, all the spontaneity of good
conversations anywhere, and benefits greatly from the integrity and
wisdom of its contributors.' --McKay Jenkins, The
Star-Ledger, Newark
'This is not a book for the faint-hearted. . . . Cornel West, an
authentic, brilliant and prophetic black voice, deals squarely and
directly with America's problems of race, recommending changes in
behavior and attitude among blacks as well as whites, prescribing
solutions difficult to attain, but no more difficult than
perpetuation of the status quo.' --Melvyn Schreiber, County
Daily News, Galveston, Texas
'West manages to extract something from each [contributor]. His
intellectual exuberance flavors the book, and the conversations
reveal important truths about our racial impasse.' --In These
Times
This book transcribes eight meandering conversations on race conducted by West (Race Matters) with such prominent people as Harry Belafonte, poet/publisher Haki Madhubuti and Wynton Marsalis. Several were held publicly at the Schomburg Center in Harlem, and many range far from the ostensible topic of race. Among the more substantive points here: ex-senator Bill Bradley calls for properly funding the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; law professor Patricia Williams suggests that not talking about race leads to stress and mental illness in blacks; Maya Angelou urges listeners to "use it all," to gain inspiration from any thinker. However, the speechifying West tends to applaud rather than challenge his interviewees, and this book does not fully engage many important issues‘Afrocentrism, affirmative action, unwed motherhood, tensions between black men and black women‘that will likely affect the future of black America. This title is the first project of the Obsidian Society, a nonprofit organization that helps African American arts projects. Sealey, who edited these tapes, is founder of the Obsidian Society and a doctoral student in American history at the City University of New York. Author tour. (Oct.)
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