Begin
Again: James Baldwin's America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our Own
by Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
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James
Baldwin grew disillusioned by the failure of the civil rights movement to force
America to confront its lies about race. In our own moment, when that
confrontation feels more urgently needed than ever, what can we learn from his
struggle?
“In
the midst of an ugly Trump regime and a beautiful Baldwin revival, Eddie Glaude
has plunged to the profound depths and sublime heights of Baldwin’s prophetic
challenge to our present-day crisis.”—Cornel West
We live, according to Eddie S.
Glaude Jr., in a moment when the struggles of Black Lives Matter and the
attempt to achieve a new America have been challenged by the election of Donald
Trump, a president whose victory represents yet another failure of America to
face the lies it tells itself about race. From Charlottesville to the policies
of child separation at the border, his administration turned its back on the
promise of Obama’s presidency and refused to embrace a vision of the country
shorn of the insidious belief that white people matter more than others.
We have been here before: For
James Baldwin, these after times came in the wake of the civil rights movement,
when a similar attempt to compel a national confrontation with the truth was
answered with the murders of Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King,
Jr. In these years, spanning from the publication of The Fire Next Time in 1963
to that of No Name in the Street in 1972, Baldwin transformed into a more
overtly political writer, a change that came at great professional and personal
cost. But from that journey, Baldwin emerged with a sense of renewed purpose
about the necessity of pushing forward in the face of disillusionment and
despair.
In the story of Baldwin’s
crucible, Glaude suggests, we can find hope and guidance through our own after
times, this Trumpian era of shattered promises and white retrenchment. Mixing
biography—drawn partially from newly uncovered interviews—with history, memoir,
and trenchant analysis of our current moment, Begin Again is Glaude’s endeavor,
following Baldwin, to bear witness to the difficult truth of race in America
today. It is at once a searing exploration that lays bare the tangled web of
race, trauma, and memory, and a powerful interrogation of what we all must ask
of ourselves in order to call forth a new America.
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