ABSTRACT

This volume is the first comprehensive examination of African American conservative thought and politics from the late eighteenth century to the present. The essays in the collection explore various aspects of African American conservatism, including biographical studies of abolitionist James Forten, clergymen Henry McNeal Turner and J.H. Jackson, and activists A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin. Thematic essays in the volume consider southern black conservatism in the late nineteenth century and after World War I, African American success manuals, Ellisonian cultural criticism , the Nation of Islam, and African Americans and the Republican Party after 1964.

chapter |28 pages

The Washingtonian Legacy

A History of Black Political Conservatism in America, 1915–1944

chapter |24 pages

Radical Rhetoric, Conservative Reality

The Nation of Islam as an American Conservative Formation

chapter |32 pages

Uncle Tom, Pragmatist, or Visionary?

An Assessment of the Reverend Dr. Joseph Harrison Jackson and Civil Rights