The prominent black intellectual interviews nine artists, scholars, and public figures--including Maya Angelou, Bill Bradley, Patricia Williams, and Haki Madhubuti--about the reasons for blacks to have hope for the future and other topics. 200,000 first printing. Tour.
Cornel Ronald West is an American scholar and public intellectual. Formerly at Harvard University, West is currently a professor of Religion at Princeton. West says his intellectual contributions draw from such diverse traditions as the African American Baptist Church, Marxism, pragmatism, transcendentalism, and Anton Chekhov.
Pretty dated. West doesn't offer much to the conversations outside of his predictable analysis of hope and spirituality in the Black community. Not the best of his work, or a good entry for those who are curious about what makes his career as a public intellectual so stunning. There were glimmers of hope that came out some of the conversations when West allowed folks to just speak. Haki Madhubuti (founder of Third World Press) did a great job illustrating the necessity of autonomous institution building. His testimony illustrated the importance of accepting help from, being inspired by, and continuing to sustain the community one is committed to change.
This is an excellent book from an outstanding philosopher. My big regret over this book is that I have a personally signed copy that fell in a mud puddle, damaging the book and ruining the book-sleeve.