The Black Presidency : Barack Obama and the Politics of Race in America
by Dyson, Michael Eric
Published by : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (Boston, New York) Physical details: xvi,346 Pages 24x16 cm | HB ISBN:9780544387669.Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Stacks | Non-fiction | 305.800973 D998B 2016 (Browse shelf) | Available | 18542 |
Include Note and Index
Michael Eric Dyson delivers a provocative exploration of the politics of race and the Obama presidency. Barack Obama's presidency unfolded against the national traumas of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Freddie Gray, and Walter Scott. The nation's first African American president was careful to give few major race speeches, yet he faced criticism from all sides, including from African Americans. How has Obama's race affected his presidency and the nation's identity? Dyson explores whether Obama's use of his own biracialism as a symbol has been driven by the president's desire to avoid a painful moral reckoning on race. And he sheds light on identity issues within the black power structure, telling how Obama has spurned traditional black power brokers, significantly reducing their leverage. Perhaps most movingly, Dyson illuminates the transformative moments, especially in his second term, when Obama has publicly embraced his blackness and used it as a powerful lens onto America, black and white. President Obama's own voice--from an Oval Office interview granted to Dyson for the book--along with that of Eric Holder, Al Sharpton, and Andrew Young, among others, adds depth to this tour of the nation's first black presidency.--Adapted from book jacket.
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