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Plains Histories

Free Radical: Ernest Chambers, Black Power, and the Politics of Race

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Amid the deadly racial violence of the 1960s, an unassuming student from a fundamentalist Christian home in Omaha emerged as a leader and nationally recognized black activist. Ernest Chambers, elected to the Nebraska State Legislature in 1970, eventually became one of the most influential legislators the state has ever known. As Chambers bids for reelection in 2012 to the office he held for thirty-eight years, Omaha native Tekla Agbala Ali Johnson illuminates his embattled career as a fiercely independent self-styled “defender of the downtrodden.” Tracing the growth of the Black Power Movement in Nebraska and throughout the U.S., Ali Johnson discovers its unprecedented emphasis on electoral politics. For the first time since Reconstruction, voters catapulted hundreds of African American community leaders into state and national political arenas. Special-interest groups and political machines would curb the success of aspiring African American politicians, just as urban renewal would erode their geographical and political bases, compelling the majority to join the Democratic or Republican parties. Chambers was one of the few not to capitulate. In her revealing study of the man and those he represented, Ali Johnson portrays one intellectual’s struggle alongside other African Americans to actualize their latent political power.

366 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2012

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for N Sheppard.
51 reviews
January 1, 2021
Powerful book on civil rights activist and Nebraskan state senator Ernest Chambers. He was frequently the only black senator in the Nebraskan unicameral, but was still able to make great strides for underrepresented and forgotten Nebraskans.

Wonder what Chambers would think about today's (more widespread) calls for police abolition.

-1 because repetition made the book unnecessarily lengthy and harder to read
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