Supreme Understanding
Autore di Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil (Dover Thrift Editions)
Sull'Autore
Opere di Supreme Understanding
The Hood Health Handbook: A Practical Guide to Health and Wellness in the Urban Community (Volume One) (2010) 12 copie
When The World Was Black: The Untold Story of the World's First Civilizations, Part 2 - Ancient Civilizations… (2016) 10 copie
The Hood Health Handbook: A Practical Guide to Health and Wellness in the Urban Community (Volume Two) (2010) 6 copie
When The World Was Black , Part One: The Untold History of the World's First Civilizations | Prehistoric Culture (2017) 2 copie
365 Days of Real Black History: Little-known Facts of the Global Black Experience from Prehistory to the Present (2010) 1 copia
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome canonico
- Supreme Understanding
- Nome legale
- Das, Sujan
Utenti
Recensioni
Liste
Statistiche
- Opere
- 15
- Utenti
- 533
- Popolarità
- #46,708
- Voto
- 4.2
- Recensioni
- 8
- ISBN
- 66
- Lingue
- 2
Du Bois’ non-fiction essays were like a beacon at a time when America was mired in the nadir of race relations; this was a time of lynchings, massacres, segregation, sundown towns, and the President enthusiastically watching The Birth of a Nation in the White House. He is insightful and presages the rise of White Nationalism and Hitler in his brilliant chapter The Souls of White Folk. He points out America’s hypocrisy in making the “World Safe for Democracy” and condemning Germany for things like the Rape of Belgium in 1918 when it was committing its own atrocities all over the country. He criticizes colonialism and the teaching of world history in ways that are skewed towards white people and Western European nations. He speaks up for the working man against greedy businessmen, and points out the irony of white blue collar workers thinking their black counterparts were the enemy. He speaks up for women, and black women in particular. A great deal of it is still highly relevant today.
Du Bois was very well read and abreast of current events, which he often references without full explanation. A better modern edition would have included footnotes for the reader, but I didn’t mind pausing to look things up as I went. Reading The Shadow of Years had me referencing the lynching of Sam Hose in 1899, Of Work and Wealth spurs a reading on the massacres of black people in East St. Louis over May-July 1917, and The Second Coming the May 1918 lynchings and horrifying brutality in Valdosta Georgia (including to Mary Turner and her unborn baby).
On a lighter note, The Immortal Child had me sampling composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s works. And in one of his more extraordinary moments, after describing a litany of ways everyday racism may be encountered in Of Beauty and Death, he points out that “we cannot forget that this world is beautiful,” which gave me goosebumps.
Just this quote, on the wealth gap:
“Thus the shadow of hunger, in a world which never needs to be hungry, drives us to war and murder and hate. But why does hunger shadow so vast a mass of men? Manifestly because in the great organizing of men for work a few of the participants come out with more wealth than they can possibly use, while a vast number emerge with less they can decently support life. In earlier economic stages we defended this as the reward of Thrift and Sacrifice, and the punishment of Ignorance and Crime. To this the answer is sharp: Sacrifice calls for no such reward and Ignorance deserves no such punishment.”… (altro)