Toward the
end of the Obama presidency, the work of James Baldwin began to enjoy a
renaissance that was both much overdue and comfortless. Baldwin stands
as one of the greatest American writers of the twentieth century, and
any celebration of his work is more than welcome. But it was less a
reveling than a panic. The eight years of the first black president were
giving way to some of the most blatant and vitriolic displays of racism
in decades, while the shooting deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown,
and others too numerous to list sparked a movement in defense of black
lives. In Baldwin, people found a voice from the past so relevant that
he seemed prophetic.
More than any other writer, Baldwin has become the model for black
public-intellectual work. The role of the public intellectual is to
proffer new ideas, encourage deep thinking, challenge norms, and model
forms of debate that enrich our discourse. For black intellectuals, that
work has revolved around the persistence of white supremacy. Black
abolitionists, ministers, and poets theorized freedom and exposed the
hypocrisy of American democracy throughout the period of slavery. After
emancipation, black colleges began training generations of scholars,
writers, and artists who broadened black intellectual life. They helped
build movements toward racial justice during the late nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, whether through pathbreaking journalism, research,
or activism. ... [mehr] https://harpers.org/archive/2018/12/the-burden-of-the-black-public-intellectual/
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