Malcolm X
Description
A clear, incisive portrait of Malcolm X.
>First, he articulated the perspectives, frustrations and aspirations of an urban black working class borne of U.S. mass migration during and between two world wars. Second, as the chief national representative of the Nation of Islam (NOI), Malcolm powerfully transmitted a longstanding Black Nationalist ideological tradition to a generation of black freedom activists who came of age during the 1960s. Third, over the course of his brief political career, Malcolm attempted to wed Black Nationalist principles of African American autonomy and, ultimately, sovereignty to mass direct action, which was the dominant strategy of the civil rights struggle of the 1950s and 1960s. And finally, going against the grain of domestic Cold War consensus politics (and consistent with movement predecessors such as Marcus Garvey and W.E.B. DuBois), Malcolm challenged his contemporaries to transcend purely domestic civil rights goals and adopt an internationalist, pan-African politics that linked black social insurgency in North America with movements against colonialism and imperialism in Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Africa.