Black conservative intellectuals in modern America by Ondaatje, Michael L

Black conservative intellectuals in modern America
by Ondaatje, Michael L

(#8LHCY36)

Follett eBook (perpetual term) (single-user access) University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010
Description: 1 online resource (220 pages)
Dewey: 320.52092

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Product Overview
From Follett

OldControl:muse9780812206876.;Includes bibliographical references (pages 157-208) and index.;Profiles of an intellectual vanguard -- Affirmative action dilemmas -- Partisans of the poor? -- Visions of school reform.;Print version record.;In English. Michael L. Ondaatje examines the ideas and arguments of prominent black conservative thinkers during the past three decades, charting the evolution of black conservative thought in relation to key debates on affirmative action, welfare, and education.

From the Publisher
In the last three decades, a brand of black conservatism espoused by a controversial group of African American intellectuals has become a fixture in the nation's political landscape, its proponents having shaped policy debates over some of the most pressing matters that confront contemporary American society. Their ideas, though, have been neglected by scholars of the African American experience—and much of the responsibility for explaining black conservatism's historical and contemporary significance has fallen to highly partisan journalists. Typically, those pundits have addressed black conservatives as an undifferentiated mass, proclaiming them good or bad, right or wrong, color-blind visionaries or Uncle Toms. In Black Conservative Intellectuals in Modern America, Michael L. Ondaatje delves deeply into the historical archive to chronicle the origins of black conservatism in the United States from the early 1980s to the present. Focusing on three significant policy issues—affirmative action, welfare, and education—Ondaatje critically engages with the ideas of nine of the most influential black conservatives. He further documents how their ideas were received, both by white conservatives eager to capitalize on black support for their ideas and by activists on the left who too often sought to impugn the motives of black conservatives instead of challenging the merits of their claims. While Ondaatje's investigation uncovers the themes and issues that link these voices together, he debunks the myth of a monolithic black conservatism. Figures such as Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, the Hoover Institution's Thomas Sowell and Shelby Steele, and cultural theorist John McWhorter emerge as individuals with their own distinct understandings of and relationships to the conservative political tradition.
Product Details
  • Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
  • Publication Date: November 29, 2011
  • Format: Follett eBook (perpetual term) (single-user access)
  • Series: EBL-Schweitzer
  • Dewey: 320.52092
  • Description: 1 online resource (220 pages)
  • ISBN-10: 0-8122-0687-8
  • ISBN-13: 978-0-8122-0687-6
  • Follett Number: 8LHCY36