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What's My Name - Black Vernacular Intellectuals (Paperback, New)
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What's My Name - Black Vernacular Intellectuals (Paperback, New)
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Whom does society consider an intellectual and on what grounds?
Antonio Gramsci's democratic vision of intelligence famously
suggested that "all men are intellectuals, " yet within academic
circles and among the general public, intellectuals continue to be
defined by narrow, elite criteria. In this study of four celebrated
citizens of the African diaspora--American boxer Muhammad Ali, West
Indian Marxist critic C. L. R. James, British cultural theorist
Stuart Hall, and Jamaican musician Bob Marley--Grant Farred
develops a new category of engaged thinker: the vernacular
intellectual. Extending Gramsci's concept of the organic
intellectual, Farred conceives of vernacular intellectuals as
individuals who challenge social injustice from inside and outside
traditional academic or political spheres. Muhammad Ali, for
example, is celebrated as much for his dazzling verbal skills and
courageous political stands as for his pugilistic talents; Bob
Marley's messages of liberation are as central to his popularity as
his lyrical and melodic sophistication. Neither man is described as
an intellectual, yet both perform crucial intellectual functions:
shaping how people see the world, oppose hegemony, and understand
their own history. In contrast, the careers of C. L. R. James and
Stuart Hall reflect a dynamic blend of the traditional and the
vernacular. Conventionally trained and situated, James and Hall
examine racism, history, and the lasting impact of colonialism in
ways that draw on both established scholarship and more popular
cultural experiences. Challenging existing paradigms, What's My
Name? offers an expansive and inclusive vision of intellectual
activity that is as valid and meaningful inthe boxing ring, the
press conference, and the concert hall as in academia.
Understanding the full complexity of the black experience through
the intellectual achievements of pop culture personalities.
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