Malcolm X: A Historical Reader

Front Cover
James L. Conyers, Andrew P. Smallwood
Carolina Academic Press, 2008 - Biography & Autobiography - 405 pages

Much has been written on the life and work of Malcolm X, one of the most important Black leaders of the twentieth century. Editors Conyers and Smallwood have assembled an impressive array of contributors whose works reflect their expertise in the fields of history, sociology, social work, religion, literature, labor and management, and Africana studies. The essays fuse social science, humanistic, and professional studies methods as they look at Malcolm X and his contributions in place, space, and time.

The objective of the essays is simple and straightforward. First, the book hopes to challenge scholars in Africana studies to re-examine and re-emphasize Africana leadership of the nineteenth and twentieth century. Certainly, the idea of this reclamation is critical to examining agency and sovereignty of African people. Second, the articles promote the implementation of Afrocentric meta-theories in order to describe and evaluate Africana phenomena. Lastly, the contributions offer readers interdisciplinary tools for restoring, connecting, and retaining the cultural milieu of Africana accomplishments.

From inside the book

Contents

The Legacy of Malcolm X as a Framework for Social Welfare
55
The Sociology of Malcolm X
67
The Sociopolitical Philosophy of Malcolm X
93
Copyright

18 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2008)

Andrew Smallwood is a Full-time Assistant Professor in the Center for Ethnic Studies at Borough of Manhattan Community College in New York.

Bibliographic information