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Title Redefining Black power : reflections on the state of Black America / edited by Joanne Griffith.

Publication Info. San Francisco : City Lights Books, [2012]
©2012

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 New Britain, Main Library - Non Fiction  305.896 R24    Check Shelf
 Windsor, Main Library - Adult Department  305.896073 RE    Check Shelf
Description 207 pages ; 21 cm.
Series Open Media series
Open Media book.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Contents The movement for the expansion and deepening of democracy in America : a conversation of context with Dr. Vincent Harding -- What about the brother at the bottom of the well? : law in the age of Obama with Professor Michelle Alexander -- Dollars and sense? : race, recession and recovery : racial equality and economic parity with Dr. Julianne Malveaux -- Barack Obama, the new crack? : a story of revolution with Ramona Africa -- Probing the president : the media's paralysis of analysis? : race, the press and the White House with Linn Washington, Jr -- It matters what needs to be done : politics and green activism with Van Jones -- A quiet victory for emotional justice : the first family and the African American psyche with Esther Armah -- Going forward / Joanne Giffith.
Summary Few were more galvanized by the election of Obama than African Americans. But four years after the first black president moved into the Oval Office, the excitement has been supplemented by the sober realization that no single individual can tackle the major civil rights challenges that remain. BBC journalist Griffith interviews activists, scholars, and others, including Obama's former Green Jobs Advisor Van Jones, to delve into the psyche of African Americans during the Obama years. This slim volume packs a punch as it unpacks uncomfortable truths, and the provocative voices here do not mince words. Some, like Ohio State University law professor Michelle Alexander, fault Obama for not doing more for blacks, going so far as to declare that "there really is no point in putting black and brown faces in positions of power if they aren't actually going to make much of a difference." But others say African Americans slipped into the trap of seeing Obama as a "saviour" and failed to understand that the president is head of state, not the leader of a new civil rights movement. Consequently, according to Jones, expecting Obama to "fix black America" is a mistake; if anyone is going to do that, it will be some person or group outside the political realm. Operating as he does within the constraints of Washington, the president's greatest triumph is perhaps more psychological, as Obama, his wife, and daughters have provided a much needed emotional boost for blacks as the country's First Family.
Subject African Americans -- Social conditions -- 21st century.
African Americans -- Politics and government -- 21st century.
Obama, Barack.
United States -- Race relations -- 21st century.
United States -- Politics and government -- 2009-2017
Griffith, Joanne -- Interviews.
Added Author Griffith, Joanne.
ISBN 9780872865464: $16.95
0872865460
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