Social and political change is impossible in the absence of
gifted male charismatic leadership--this is the fiction that shaped
African American culture throughout the twentieth century. If we
understand this, Erica R. Edwards tells us, we will better
appreciate the dramatic variations within both the modern black
freedom struggle and the black literary tradition.
By considering leaders such as Marcus Garvey, Martin Luther King
Jr., Malcolm X, and Barack Obama as both historical personages and
narrative inventions of contemporary American culture, Edwards
brings to the study of black politics the tools of intertextual
narrative analysis as well as deconstruction and close reading.
Examining a number of literary restagings of black leadership in
African American fiction by W. E. B. Du Bois, George Schuyler, Zora
Neale Hurston, William Melvin Kelley, Paul Beatty, and Toni
Morrison, Edwards demonstrates how African American literature has
contested charisma as a structuring fiction of modern black
politics.
Though recent scholarship has challenged top-down accounts of
historical change, the presumption that history is made by gifted
men continues to hold sway in American letters and life. This may
be, Edwards shows us, because while charisma is a transformative
historical phenomenon, it carries an even stronger seductive
narrative power that obscures the people and methods that have
created social and political shifts.
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