Race Matters

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Race Matters
ISBN
0-679-74986-1

Race Matters is a

skin color
in the United States. The book questions matters of economics and politics, as well as ethical issues and spirituality, and also addresses the crisis in black American leadership.

Summary

The book consists of an introduction, followed by eight essays, many of which previously appeared in other publications, such as

Z Magazine
. In order, these essays are:

  • 1. "Nihilism in Black America"
  • 2. "The Pitfalls of Racial Reasoning"
  • 3. "The Crisis of Black Leadership"
  • 4. "Demystifying the New Black Conservatism"
  • 5. "Beyond Affirmative Action: Equality and Identity"
  • 6. "On Black-Jewish Relations"
  • 7. "Black Sexuality: The Taboo Subject"
  • 8. "Malcolm X and Black Rage"

Reception

Michiko Kakutani praised Race Matters, writing in The New York Times "one can only applaud the ferocious moral vision and astute intellect on display in these pages", though she criticized his proposed solutions to racial problems as 'vague and sentimentally utopian'.[1]

A positive review in

W.E.B. Du Bois' The Souls of Black Folk, as exhilarating in their offering of liberation as James Baldwin's early essays".[2]

Race Matters received a negative review in Commentary which stated that 'despite the artful packaging, West's ultimate message is neither new nor courageous' and singled out the chapter on the relationship between black people and Jews as 'deeply flawed, evasive, and less than honest'.[3]

Race Matters received a positive review in Publishers Weekly, which called the book 'powerful' and said that the essays 'solidify [West's] position as one of the nation's leading public intellectuals' [4]

The book was positively received by Kirkus Reviews, which praised West's 'clear thinking and sensible analysis' though stated that, in aiming for a broad audience 'West perhaps too much curtails his customary intellectual range'.[5]

References

  1. ^ Michiko Kakutani. "Rage and reason in the crisis of black America". The New York Times.
  2. ^ David Nicholson. "Race, Culture and Morality". The Washington Post.
  3. ^ Arch Puddington. "Race Matters, by Cornel West". Commentary.
  4. ^ "Nonfiction Book Review: Race Matters by Cornel West". Publishers Weekly.
  5. ^ "Race Matters". Kirkus Reviews.