The radical black left that played a crucial role in
twentieth-century struggles for equality and justice has largely
disappeared. Michael Dawson investigates the causes and
consequences of the decline of black radicalism as a force in
American politics and argues that the conventional left has failed
to take race sufficiently seriously as a historical force in
reshaping American institutions, politics, and civil society.
African Americans have been in the vanguard of progressive
social movements throughout American history, but they have been
written out of many histories of social liberalism. Focusing on the
1920s and 1930s, as well as the Black Power movement, Dawson
examines successive failures of socialists and Marxists to enlist
sympathetic blacks, and white leftists refusal to fight for the
cause of racial equality. Angered by the often outright hostility
of the Socialist Party and similar social democratic organizations,
black leftists separated themselves from these groups and either
turned to the hard left or stayed independent. A generation later,
the same phenomenon helped fueled the Black Power movement s turn
toward a variety of black nationalist, Maoist, and other radical
political groups.
The 2008 election of Barack Obama notwithstanding, many African
Americans still believe they will not realize the fruits of
American prosperity any time soon. This pervasive discontent,
Dawson suggests, must be mobilized within the black community into
active opposition to the social and economic status quo. Black
politics needs to find its way back to its radical roots as a vital
component of new American progressive movements."
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