The price of the ticket: Barack Obama and the rise and decline of Black politics
In: Transgressing boundaries
In: Transgressing boundaries
In this book, Fred Harris contends that Obama's success has, in reality, exacted a negative price. His victory has not only utterly transformed the forms of black politics that emerged in the 1960s and which laid the foundation for his eventual ascendance, Harris claims - it has profoundly weakened them.
In: Transgressing boundaries
In: Transgressing Boundaries: Studies in Black Politics and Black Communities Ser.
In The Price of the Ticket, Fred Harris contends that Obama's success has, in reality, exacted a negative price. His victory has not only utterly transformed the forms of black politics that emerged in the 1960s and which laid the foundation for his eventual ascendance, Harris claims-it has profoundly weakened them. Harris starts by placing Obama's election within the larger trajectory of the Civil Rights and post-Civil Rights eras, then considers the ramifications of the shift away from an earlier model of black politics that concentrated on ending racial inequality. While Harris recognizes the historic nature of Obama's victory, he also reminds us that it has not effaced the bitter legacies stemming from hundreds of years of white supremacy.
In: Transgressing boundaries : studies in Black politics and Black communities
African Americans, African American political activists, African American politicians, Politics and government, History
Englisch
Oxford University Press
xviii, 210
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