The Jesse Jackson Phenomenon: The Crisis of Purpose in Afro-American PoliticsHow did Jesse Jackson - who had never run in an election and had only recently registered to vote - become the black candidate for the 1984 Democratic presidential nomination? What does his campaign show about the dynamics that drive Afro-American political activity? In the first book to analyze the Jackson campaign, a black scholar who has worked extensively with local black political organizations argues that the Jackson Candidacy revealed tensions within Afro-American politics and hurt rather than helped the development of a viable black political movement. Reed demonstrates that issues such as the competition for top leadership roles among Afro-Americans, the deepening income and class stratification within the black community, and the disintegration of the Democratic coalition that has in the past supported black aspirations are all problems facing Afro-American politics today. He studies these areas of contention in several ways. First, he explores the rift between black elected politicians and black politicians who, like Jackson, come from the "protest politics" of the 1960s. Since the black church is the source for many of the protest politicians, Reed critically reconstructs the role of the church in black politics and suggests that, contrary to prevailing views, the church in general has not been associated with emancipatory or progressive interests in the black community. Reed then discusses the relationship between Afro-Americans and the other constituents of the Democratic coalition, particularly the labor movement and organized Jewry, and he comments insightfully on the controversies that attended the Jackson campaign's relationship with each of those groups. He also examines reactions of the mass media and the left to Jackson's campaign, discovering both to be reluctant to apply the same standards to black political activity that are used to evaluate white political efforts. Reed concludes by proposing strategies for black political action: these include constructing a political counteroffensive to the retrenchment associated with Reaganism and cultivating a more creative discourse about politics within the black community. |
Contents
The Jackson Candidacy and Electoral | 11 |
The Jackson Phenomenon and Leadership | 31 |
Mythology of the Church in Contemporary | 41 |
The Crisis of Political Agenda in the Black | 61 |
Elite SelfInterest and Tension with Labor | 79 |
Blacks and Jews in the Democratic Coalition | 88 |
Other editions - View all
The Jesse Jackson Phenomenon: The Crisis of Purpose in Afro-American Politics Adolph L. Reed No preview available - 1986 |
Common terms and phrases
activists affirmative action AFL-CIO Afro-American politics agenda American politics Andrew Young anti-Semitism articulation Atlanta authenticity basis Black Anti-Semitism black church black community black constituency black interests Black Leaders black leadership black political black political activity black political elites black population black voters black/Jewish Carolina church-based civil rights movement claims clerical coalition concern context convention critical debate Democratic party discourse elected officials electoral entrenched Frazier function groups growth Hosea Williams Howell Raines Ibid increase issues Jackson advocates Jackson campaign Jackson phenomenon Jackson supporters Jackson's candidacy Jackson's initiative Jesse Jackson Jewish elites Jews legitimation linkages litical ment mobilization Mondale Moreover NAACP organizations participation popular presidential programmatic protest elite race racial Reagan relation representation Roger Wilkins role Ronald Smothers runoff primary social South southern spokespersons status strategy tion vote voter registration W. E. B. DuBois Wall Street Journal Washington Post Wilkins York Times July



