Charles Pete Banner-Haley is an associate professor of history and the former director of the Africana–Latin American Studies Program at Colgate University. He is the author of To Do Good and to Do Well: Middle Class Blacks and the Depression, Philadelphia, 1929–1941 and The Fruits of Integration: Black Middle Class Ideology and Culture, 1960–1990.
Preface | p. ix |
Introduction: What Is an African American Intellectual? | p. 1 |
The Emergence of the Black Public Intellectual: Race, Class, and the Struggle against Racism | p. 12 |
Black Intellectuals and the Quest for Legitimacy: Civil Rights, Black Power, and the Expenditure of Moral Capital | p. 32 |
The Conservative Revolution and Its Impact on Afro America, 1980-1992 | p. 63 |
Popular Culture and the African American Intellectual Search for a New American Identity | p. 85 |
A New Century and New Challenges: The Visibility of African American Intellectuals and the Construction of Diasporic Diversity | p. 105 |
Notes | p. 127 |
Bibliography | p. 143 |
Index | p. 155 |
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