History And Development Of Black Protest Rhetoric Of Web Dubois

W.E.B DuBois was a very educated man he received his Doctoral degree from Harvard University and was the first black male to do so. Dubois was an activist of the black community. As remarked once by Martin Luther King Jr. ‘history cannot ignore W.E.B. DuBois because history has to reflect truth and Dr. DuBois was a tireless explorer and a gifted discoverer of social truths. His singular greatness lay in his quest for truth about his own people. There were very few scholars who concerned themselves with honest study of the black man and he sought to fill this immense void. The degree to which he succeeded disclosed the great dimensions of the man.’ Throughout his career, his ideas of ‘educate and agitate’ certainly agitated other black leaders and revolutionaries such as the likes of Marcus Garvey and his Back to Africa Movement or Booker T. Washington founder of Tuskegee Institute. His rivalry with Washington the most famous as Washington produced as many results as he did. His belief was firmly in the idea of ‘racial uplift’ and using agriculture as a way to do that. Washington also was for reconciling with the South and forgetting past discrepancies against blacks when they were once slaves and even after emancipation facing Jim Crow and lynching’s for those who did not abide the ‘separate but equal’ doctrines. DuBois was a firm believer of the ‘Talented Tenth’ of blacks and working toward making them the leaders and educators of the race. As well as forging ahead to make the black race of great repute in America.

Born February 23, 1868, William Edward Burghardt DuBois in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. DuBois became one of the most successful social activist, scholar and writer of the twentieth century. He descended of African, French, and Dutch lineage hence his name. DuBois was one of 25-50 blacks who lived in Great Barrington out of 5,000 whites. (http://www.naacp.org/pages/naacp-history-w.e.b.-dubois) So therefore signs of blatant Jim Crow and racism were not made blatant, there was a tone underlying the attitudes of those whom lived there? DuBois’ personality became abrupt and sullen as he got older as opposed to cheerful and outgoing as he had been when he was young. (http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/web-dubois-is-born)

DuBois was very intellectually gifted, doing very well in high school. He got a full scholarship to Fisk University in Tennessee, a black institution. After receiving his A.B. he then attended Harvard where he was to receive his B.A. graduating cum laude. His speech on Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederacy during the Civil War, was to make a stir and make news in the national press. (http://www.naacp.org/pages/naacp-history-w.e.b.-dubois) It would be the first of many scholarly honors he would receive and also the turning of heads. Studying in Europe was a dream of DuBois’ and after earning his M.A. in History at Harvard he went on to study at the University of Berlin with some of the great German minds in philosophy and sociology and economics. DuBois returned to the states to become the first man of African descent to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard University. (http://www.naacp.org/pages/naacp-history-w.e.b.-dubois)

In his lifetime, DuBois accomplished much putting his intellectual gifts to work. In 1897, he directed the Atlanta Conferences which convened annually to generate concise scientific research on the living conditions of African Americans. From those conferences he collected, collated, and analyzed socioeconomic data about every conceivable facet of being a black person in America. Ambitious at the time and still is he published about sixteen volumes on his findings. (http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/web-dubois-is-born)

In 1903, he published his first of remembered works The Philadelphia Negro and later the Souls of Black Folks. The latter being his most prophetic and remembered. (http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/web-dubois-is-born) His essays on race and society and economics were published in such journals as The Independent, Nation, The Southern Workman, Harper’s Weekly, World’s Work, The Outlook, The Missionary Review, and the Literary Digest, the annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science and the Dial. DuBois plunged himself into anthropological, sociological, historical, economic, and philosophical studies of blacks in America hoping to elude a ‘cure’ for the race problem in America. (www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/race/etc/road.html)

He was editor for the Crisis, the official magazine for the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) which he helped to find in 1910. He used his knowledge and position to write many influential articles on blacks in America. Making him extraordinarily popular. As a representative of the NAACP he went to the Peace Conference after the Armistice was signed at the end of World War I. (http://www.naacp.org/pages/naacp-history-w.e.b.-dubois) He organized a Pan African Conference (he wasn’t the founder) to discuss the situations of Africans everywhere, realizing for blacks to be free they must be free everywhere.

Back tracking a bit to the year 1903 W.E.B Dubois was in a heated intellectual battle with a few southern leaders Booker T. Washington was the main target of Dubois. Booker T. Washington delivered a speech that would later be known as the “Atlanta compromise”. At the time, the Washington/Dubois dispute polarized African American leaders into two wings–the ‘conservative’ supporters of Washington and his ‘radical’ critics. The Du Bois philosophy of agitation and protest for civil rights flowed directly into the Civil Rights movement which began to develop in the 1950’s and exploded in the 1960’s.

Dubois’s speech in response to Washington wrote in one of his most acclaimed works “The souls of black folk” was called “Equality and Education”. Dubois employed a Value claim in order to deter everything that was stated in the “Atlanta compromise” a Value claim is where the speaker is advocating a judgment claim determining whether it was good or bad right or wrong. In this instance he was saying that Washington’s solution was the wrong one and would the black community in a very bad state. Dubois stated this clearly in his letter when he stated: ‘The criticism that has hitherto met Mr. Washington has not always been of this broad character. In the south especially has he had to walk warily to avoid the harsh judgments, and naturally so, for he is dealing with the one subject of deepest sensitivities to that section. Twice ,once when at the Chicago celebration of the Spanish-American War he alluded to the color-prejudice that is “eating away he vitals of the south,” and once when he dined with President Roosevelt has he resulting Southern criticism been violent enough to threaten seriously his popularity in the North the feeling has several times forced itself into words that Mr. Washington’s counsels of submission overlooked certain elements of true manhood and that his educational pregame was unnecessarily narrow.’ (W.E.B Dubois)

Dubois was attacking the very fundemtals of Washington’s integrity as well has his true motives for his program. America was going through an age of unusual economic development and Dubois felt that Washington was trying to pull blacks down in the very time he should have been encouraging them to accomplish things they never thought possible. However without the proper education we could not do that, education was one of the very things that Washington’s program was trying to limit, Dubois felt that if Washington could build Tuskegee institute the should know how import education was to the Black community. There were three vital things to our advancement that Washington neglected in his speech: Political power in a time that we needed to be represented the most, Civil Rights we had just been freed civil rights weren’t just going to be handed to the blacks of the south, and higher education of the Negro. Dubois knew that knowledge of lue collar work would not help us reach the next level in citizenship. Dubois didn’t stop there he went on to break down how none of the “Atlanta compromise would not help us. He stated that “Washington is striving nobly to make Negros artisans, business men, and property-owners: but it is utterly impossible, under modern competitive methods, for workingmen and property owners to defend their rights and exist without the right of suffrage. Washington insists on thrift and self-respect, but at the same time councils a silent submission to civic inferiority such as is bound to sap the manhood of any race in the long run. Washington advocates common-school and industrial training, and depreciates institutions of higher learning, but neither the negro common-schools, nor Tuskegee itself, could remain open a day were it not got teachers trained in negro colleges, or trained by their graduates.” (W.E.B Dubois)

Dubois gave his points and refuted his points in three’s. He didn’t rip Booker T. Washington to shreds at first he gave him acknowledgement for his accomplishments for they was numerous then he gave his view on the state of blacks, he stood on the backs of negro leaders in history such as Nat Turner, and Gabriel in Virginia. Then he told his opinion on the state of the Negro south but it wasn’t exclusive to just the southern Negro but it was inclusive of all people of color in America.

He used a mixture of two appeals in his writing, logos or logical and ethos or credibility. He used logical in the fact that he gave real examples of how Washington’s plan would not work, yet it was ethos because while using logic to refute Washington he inevitably called him out on his credulity in doing so. This is why his letter was pure genius. The use of these two appeals made Dubois point of view very effective added on to the fact that blacks never really agreed with Booker T. Washington’s views. They felt that trying to dodge our oppression was not the way to eliminate it.

Bibliography

  1. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/web-dubois-is-born. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.history.com: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/web-dubois-is-born
  2. http://www.naacp.org/pages/naacp-history-w.e.b.-dubois. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.naacp.org: http://www.naacp.org/pages/naacp-history-w.e.b.-dubois
  3. W.E.B Dubois. (n.d.). , Equality and Education . In T. R. Frazier, African American History.
  4. www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/race/etc/road.html. (n.d.). Retrieved from www.pbs.org: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/race/etc/road.html

Shirley Chisholm, Thurgood Marshall, W.E.B. Du Bois And Richard Allen As The Great People Of America

The four people I will be talking about have more in common than just their skin tone. These four people and the others on the list were/ are/ successful in their own great ways. We have court officials, educators, scholars, and the list continues. The four people I will be talking about in this paper are Shirley Chisolm, Thurgood Marshall, W.E.B. Du Bois, and last but not least Richard Allen.

Shirley Anita St. Hill Chisholm was born in Brooklyn New York on November 30th, 1924 (Michals, 2015). Chisholm was the eldest daughter of Charles St. Hill who was an immigrant from Guyana and Ruby Seale St. Hill an immigrant from Barbados (Michals, 2015). In 1946 Chisholm would graduate from Brooklyn College cum laude, where she would win prizes on the debate team (Michals, 2015). After earning her master’s degree in early childhood education in 1951 from Columbia University she would go on to be a consultant to the New York City Division of Day Care, then joining many groups including the NAACP (Michals, 2015). She would eventually become the first African American woman in congress (1968) where she would introduce over 50 pieces of legislation, championed racial and gender equality, and ended the Vietnam war (Michals, 2015). This very successful woman passed away on January 1st, 2005, but will continue to be remembered for her impact on the government.

Thurgood Marshall was born in Baltimore Maryland on July 2nd, 1908 (Smentkowski, 2018). He was born to two hard-working parents William Canfield Marshall and Norma Williams Marshall (Smentkowski, 2018). In 1930 Marshall graduated with honors from Lincoln Unversity in Pennsylvania, then he graduated from Howard University Law School in 1933 after being denied entry to the University of Maryland Law School because of his skin color (Smentkowski, 2018). In the 1940s through the 1950s he would become the countries top lawyer winning 29 out of the 32 cases he got (Smentkowski, 2018). One of his most successful cases was that of Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka which lit the flame the Civil Rights movements needed (Smentkowski, 2018). He died in 1993 but he will be remembered for being a great lawyer, civil rights activist, and the first African American member of the Supreme court (Smentkowski, 2018).

Williams Edward Burghardt Du Bois better known as W.E.B Du Bois was born February 23rd, 1868 in Great Barrington Massachusetts (Rudwick, 2019). In 1888 Du Bois graduated from Fisk University, and in 1985 he received his Ph. D. from Harvard University (Rudwick, 2019). Years later in 1905, he would take the lead in founding the Niagra movement which was dedicated to attacking Booker T. Washington’s platform (Rudwick, 2019). The organization he lead would become the inspiration for the NAACP or the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He would die in Accra Ghana, in 1963 but will continue to be remembered as a sociologist and social reformer (Rudwick, 2019).

Richard Allen was born into slavery in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1760 (Levison, 2007). Allen’s master Stokeley Sturgis is said to have been influenced by Allen and actually offered his slaves an opportunity to buy their way out of slavery (Levison, 2007). By 1783 Allen purchased his freedom for $2,000 and in 1786 he would teach and preach in the St. George’s Methodist Episcopal Church (Levison, 2007). He overcame slavery and he became successful, he would die in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on March 26th, 1831. He will be remembered as a great educator, writer, minister, and founder of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (Levison, 2007).

In the end, all of these great people will be remembered for their successes and how they one way or another influenced the country and or the world.

References

  1. Michals, D. (2015). Shirley Chisholm. Retrieved September 30, 2019, from https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/shirley-chisholm.
  2. Pope-Levison, P. (2019, May 2). Richard Allen [Pennsylvania] (1760-1831) • BlackPast. Retrieved September 30, 2019, from https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/allen-richard-pennsylvania-1760-1831/.
  3. Rudwick, E. (2019, September 3). W.E.B. Du Bois. Retrieved September 30, 2019, from https://www.britannica.com/biography/W-E-B-Du-Bois.
  4. Smentkowski, B. P. (2018). Thurgood Marshall. Retrieved September 30, 2019, from https://www.britannica.com/biography/Thurgood-Marshall.

W.E.B Du Bois: A Way Of Life

David Levering Lewis’s autobiography titled A Biography W.E.B Du Bios doesn’t seem intriguing, but the book is engrossing and informative.

In A Biography W.E.B Du Bios: David Levering Lewis starts were Du Bois spent most of his late years in Ghana before his death in 1963. Levering Lewis goes on to explain Du Bois’s childhood days growing up in Massachusetts where he attended primary schools until he attended Fisk and Harvard University. Lewis explained how Du Bois wrote a study about African Americans living in the City of Philadelphia for the Philadelphia Negro. After living in Philadelphia, PA, Du Bois then went on to teach at Atlanta University where he witnessed racial discrimination in the south.

This is when Lewis explained the clash between Du Bois and Booker T. Washington of how African Americans should seek meaningful equality among whites. During his life W.E.B Dubois wrote a book called the Souls of Black Folk, Du Bois also went to co-found the Niagara Movement a to fight racial discrimination and segregation. Which was the overture[footnoteRef:1] to the founding of the N.A.A.C.P [1: Lewis,1-4]

Toward the end of A Biography W.E.B Du Bios: Levering Lewis went to explain how Du Bois went to many countries to voice his concern about African descent before settling in Ghana toward the end of his life.

In 1963 Roy Wilkinson an executive member of N.A.A.C.P People informed the news of W.E.B Du Bois’s passing in Washington D.C by saying “the bearer of news of solem and great significance. Dr. Du Bois was dead.” everybody was in shock. As the members of (NAACP) asked for a moment of silence. This showed how Du Bois meant to his supporters dating back to the early twentieth century. On August 29, 1963 seven days after African Americans throughout the United States mourned the passing of W.E.B Du Bois, citizens in Ghana celebrated with a state funeral. Ghanaian’s took Du Bois body to a tomb outside the walls of the Osu Castle where Du Bois was laid to rest. Because of this, Du Bois’s burial in Ghana symbolized the return to the home of his ancestors.[footnoteRef:2] [2: Lewis,1-6]

David Levering Lewis goes on to explain about W.E.B Du Bois’s childhood life living in Great Barrington, Massachusetts; starting with Du Bois birth in February of 1868. Just wo years into his childhood, Du Bois’s mother Mary Silvinia left Du Bois’s father Alfred Du Bois. While growing up in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, Du Bois has nicknamed Willie by the townspeople, and he spent most of his education going to primary school along with whites, that were English and Dutch descendants.[footnoteRef:3] [3: Lewis, 35-40]

[bookmark: OLE_LINK3][bookmark: OLE_LINK4]When Du Bois was twelve years old he had many hardships because his mother was a widow while Du Bois was obligated to work between going to school and making friends. According to Lewis Du Bois entered school Later in W.E.D Du Bois adult life he would credit his childhood living in Great Barrington, in Massachusetts. Such as writing about his experience in Massachusetts in his adult life.

When Du Bois was 16 years old he graduated from his high school he attended in Great Barrington Massachusetts, being the first African American to do so. After graduating high school W.E.B Du Bois attended Fisk University in Tennessee, which was formerly named Fisk Free Colored School, where he experienced racial segregation for the first time. When Du Bois was at Fisk, former African American slaves were attending college for the first time.

W.E.B Du Bois went to graduate from Fisk University in 1887, where he earned his bachelor’s degree. After his time at Fisk Du Bois went on to earn his PH. D at Harvard College is the first African American to achieve the degree. After graduating from Harvard College, Lewis then explained Du Bois’s tenure at the Philadelphia Negro when Du Bois’s boss feminist Susan P. Wharton, told W.E.B Du Bois to go through with a study of the Negro population also with many institutions in Philadelphia by his side.

By doing so, Du Bois began writing a study based alongside many institutions in order to find out the results of African Americans living in Philadelphia, PA. Alongside Susan P. Wharton, Du Bois found may viruses throughout the African American community that was known as the “Black Plague”[footnoteRef:4] according to Barbara Lindsay. The research Du Bois and his colleagues were doing was dangerous because the work involved eugenics. After working for the Philadelphia Negro, W.E.B Du Bois moved on to teach at Atlanta University in the mid-1890s. Where he witnessed racial discrimination when the Georgia Legislature demanded that African Americans and whites should not eat together in the cafeteria. [4: Lewis, 133]

During his time in Atlanta, Ga W.E.B Du Bois would meet his future nemesis Booker T. Washington the head of the Tuskegee Institute in Atlanta Ga. While Atlanta Du Bois supported Washington when gave a speech in front of wealthy whites on how to seek racial equality. After the speech, Du Bois continued to support Booker T. Washington in the fight but that changed, in 1903 when W.E.B Du Bois wrote a book called The Souls of Black Folk where he criticized, his former supporter. Later in Du Bois’s life he went on to form the Niagara movement after Booker T. Washington died in 1905.

Bibliography

  1. Lewis, David L. “David Levering Lewis’s Biography.” The History Makers, 2020. https://www.thehistorymakers.org/biography/david-levering-lewis-40.

Books

  1. Lewis, David L. 2009. W.E.B. Du Bois: a biography. New York: Henry Holt and Co.

Book Review

  1. Weekly, Publisher. Book Review: W.E.B. DuBois by David Levering Lewis, https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-8050-2621-4.
  2. Rutten, Tim. A Big Idea Trounces History. Los Angeles Times, January 23, 2008. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2008-jan-23-et-rutten23-story.html.

Historiographical Essay

  1. Couvares, Francis G. Interpretations of American History. Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2009.

Sociological Theories Of Karl Marx, W.E.B Du Bois And Emile Durkheim

Introduction

Sociology is, simply the scientific study of social behavior and human groups. It focuses on social relationships, how those relationships influence peoples’ behavior and how societies, the sum of relationships, development and change.

Sociological theories are statements of how and why particular facts about the social world are related. They range in scope from concise descriptions of a single social process to paradigms for analysis and interpretation. Sociologists today employ three primary theoretical perspectives: the symbolic interactionist perspective, the functionalist perspective, and the conflict perspective. These perspectives offer sociologists theoretical paradigms for explaining how society influences people, and vice versa. Each perspective uniquely conceptualizes society, social forces, and human behavior.

Karl Marx, W.E.B Du Bois, and Emile Durkheim are widely recognized as the trinity of sociological theory. While these three sociologists were trailblazing social theorists who enhanced the study of human behavior and its relationship to social institutions, other, more contemporary scholars were just as innovative like Auguste Comte, Harriet Martineau and the list goes on. In this essay I’ll be focusing on Marx, Du Bois and Durkheim and I’ll be writing about their theories and applying it to Jamaica.

Karl Marx

Karl Marx, in full Karl Heinrich Marx, born May 5, 1818, Trier, Rhine province, Prussia (Germany). He died March 14, 1883, London, (England), revolutionary, sociologist, historian, and economist. Karl Marx, is without a doubt the most influential socialist thinker to emerge in the 19th century. Although he was largely ignored by scholars in his own lifetime, his social, economic and political ideas gained rapid acceptance in the socialist movement after his death in 1883. Until quite recently almost half the population of the world lived under regimes that claim to be Marxist. This very success, however, has meant that the original ideas of Marx have often been modified and his meanings adapted to a great variety of political circumstances. In addition, the fact that Marx delayed publication of many of his writings meant that is been only recently that scholars had the opportunity to appreciate Marx’s intellectual stature.

Emile Durkheim

Emile Durkheim is the philosopher who can best help us to understand why Capitalism makes us richer and yet frequently more miserable; even – far too often – suicidal. He was born in 1858 in the little French town of Epinal, near the German border. His family were devout Jews. Durkheim himself did not believe in God, but he was always fascinated by, and sympathetic to, religion. He was a clever student. He studied at the elite Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris, travelled for a while in Germany, then took a university job in Bordeaux. He got married. There were two children: Marie and André. Before he was forty, Durkheim was appointed to a powerful and prestigious position as a professor at the Sorbonne. He had status and honor’s, but his mind remained unconventional and his curiosity insatiable. He died of a stroke in 1917.

Durkheim’s emphasis on suicide was proposed to reveal insight into an increasingly broad dimension of misery and despondency everywhere in the public eye. Suicide was the terrible hint of a greater challenge of mental pain made by Capitalism. Over his vocation, Durkheim endeavored to clarify why individuals had turned out to be so despondent in present day social orders, despite the fact that they had more chances and access to merchandise in amounts that their progenitors would never have longed for.

Durkheim is a master diagnostician of our ills. He shows us that modern economies put tremendous pressures on individuals, but leave us dangerously bereft of authoritative guidance and communal solace.

He didn’t feel capable of finding answers to the problems he identified but he knew that Capitalism would have to uncover them, or collapse. We are Durkheim’s heirs – and still have ahead of us the task he accorded us: to create new ways of belonging, to take some of the pressure off the individual, to find a correct balance between freedom and solidarity and to generate ideologies that allow us not to take our own failures so personally and sometimes so tragically.

W. E. B. Du Bois

William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was one of the most important African-American activists during the first half of the 20th century. He co-founded the NAACP and supported Pan-Africanism.

Scholar and activist W.E.B. Du Bois was born on February 23, 1868, in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. In 1895, he became the first African American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard University. Du Bois wrote extensively and was the best-known spokesperson for African-American rights during the first half of the 20th century. He co-founded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (N.A.A.C.P.) in 1909. Du Bois died in Ghana in 1963.

W. E. B Du Bois is arguably one of the most creative, discerning, and productive organizers of the sociological control. Notwithstanding driving the Pan-African development and being an extremist for social liberties for African Americans, Du Bois was a pioneer of urban humanism, a trend-setter of country human science, an innovator in criminology, the primary American social scientist of religion, and most outstandingly the principal incredible social scholar of race. The Social Theory of W. E. B. Du Bois is the main book to look at Du Bois’ compositions from a sociological viewpoint and accentuate his hypothetical commitments. This volume covers subjects, for example, the significance of race, race relations, worldwide relations, financial matters, work, legislative issues, religion, wrongdoing, sexual orientation, and education.

Similarities Between Goldman And Du Bois: Comparative Essay

Both Goldman and Du Bois have been notorious in transforming political assumptions as well as being pivotal figures in shaping history and tradition. With the same goal of emancipation, it is evident that Goldman and Du Bois identify issues in society that continue to persist as major concerns in the emerging new world order. This essay will argue that there are many similarities between Goldman and Du Bois that corroborate their ideas, but the means of enacting this complicates their relationship. While the two are not often read together, there are evident parallels in their recognition of the importance of emancipation to achieve the full development of human capacity and political agency. As well as this, the importance of education and the representation of the minority is a clear focus of mutual concern. However, it is apparent that their methods of achieving emancipation are paradoxical. Whilst Goldman argues for revolutionary means through violence and action, Du Bois contends that through reform and devotion to faith, society will learn to work together to progress and achieve social justice.

Speaking out during the height of paramount events in American history, both Goldman and Du Bois emphasise the severity of inequality in society. The events of the 1886 Haymarket affair fuelled Goldman’s development as an activist, where she became a prominent voice for the minority (Ferguson, 2011: 98). This protest to defend the rights of workers led to a violent clash between the police and protesters resulting in the police responding with open gunfire (Ferguson, 2011: 98). The aftermath of Haymarket meant that the working-class struggle was discredited which led to an increase in oppression. Similarly, the unethical nature and immorality towards people of colour as a result of slavery had a significant impact on Du Bois commitment towards eradicating racism (Du Bois, 1913: 129). The injustice witnessed by Du Bois and Goldman impelled both activists to speak out against inequality. Du Bois concept of double consciousness and the veil is similar to Goldman’s notion of ‘The Tragedy of a Woman’s Emancipation’ in revealing how inequality has led to internal conflict and a state of duality (Dickson, 1992: 300). Du Bois argues how the veil produces a “second-sight” where black people are forced to view themselves through the hostile perspective of a white America (2008: 11). Goldman in her “Tragedy of a Woman’s Emancipation” argues how women are faced with the problem of a double burden (1910: 71). More women in the workforce has just replaced the lack of freedom from the home to the workplace. Women are not equipped to compete with men and so emancipation is never attainable (Hemmings, 2013: 340). Goldman and Du Bois through these concepts convey how society attempts to foster a physical demarcation between the minority and majority which results in inequality.

Further similarities emerge between Du Bois and Goldman through their contending views of the importance of the status of women, and the role they have in achieving emancipation. Du Bois uncovers the female disenchanted view of male elites who are “corrupted by domestic or colonialist politics” (Bell, 2014: 6). Women especially are affected by what Du Bois referred to as the problem of the “Colour-line,” where minorities are treated differently to their white counterparts (Bell, 2014: 1). Du Bois ideas link to those of Rousseau who argued that “man is born free yet everywhere he is in chains.” Du Bois focus thus lies with creating a society based on “real democracy, social and economic justice and respect for women which is not confined to women of one privileged class” (1913: 129). It is evident that Goldman’s arguments are almost identical to that of Du Bois. In “The Tragedy of Woman’s Emancipation,” Goldman argues that emancipation would allow for a woman “to be human in the truest sense” (1910: 70). She contends the view that society restricts freedom of expression and fosters a social antagonism between men and women resulting in competition and conflicting interests (Goldman, 1910: 70). Therefore, through this common focus on the inequality faced by women in society, it is evident that there is resemblance in both Du Bois and Goldman’s ideas.

Educating the masses was a key method used by Goldman and Du Bois as a means of achieving enlightenment. Taking on a duty to educate citizens, these two radicals spoke to large gatherings of people, publicising racial ideals. Education, for both Goldman and Du Bois, was at the forefront of their actions where it was important to give a voice to the minority. Goldman’s attempts to report and expose the poor conditions faced by workers led to her to arrest. Her violent acts of defiance meant that she was viewed as more dangerous than ever: “Emma Goldman [was] a woman of great ability… and her persuasive powers are such to [make] her an exceedingly dangerous woman” (Caffey 1917, cited in Ferguson, 2011: 29). For Du Bois, however, education was a means of restoring the loss of an individual’s self, as a result of slavery (1913: 127). Du Bois, unlike Goldman, argued that the use of reason was enough to enlighten society without violent methods (Du Bois, 1913: 127). As a result, he dedicated his life to challenging the government and institutionalised white supremacist attitudes to accept people of colour as equals (Du Bois, 1913: 129). Thus, it is evident that whilst these two activists agree on the importance of education as a means of emancipation, Goldman’s methods were much more violent and extreme compared Du Bois.

The importance of a community is a further similarity between Goldman and Du Bois. Their principles foster the innate good within human nature. Du Bois emphasised the importance of a strong sense of community within African Americans. He argued that if America immersed itself into the culture and shared values of black people, there would be a vast improvement in society (Du Bois, 2008: 23). Racial unity according to Du Bois is “necessary for progress … because every race has something to learn from, and to teach, every other race” (Bell, 2014: 4). Taking inspiration from other Anarchist philosophers such as Proudhon and Kropotkin, Goldman viewed society as a ‘beautiful ideal’ to emphasise the potential of the individual (Ferguson, 2011: 28). For Goldman however, the root of the problem is the state. Adopting the Marxist philosophy that man is caught up on the drudgery of work, Goldman argues that the government is the inherent force that fosters an oppressive environment where its sole concern is furthering its own potential (1910: 16). “The individual and society have waged a relentless and bloody battle for ages, each striving for supremacy, because each was blind to the value and importance of the other” (Goldman, 1910: 18). By putting individual life over society, according to Goldman is a path for destruction (1910: 18). Therefore, Goldman argues for Anarchism as a solution to unite the individual and society (Goldman, 1910: 17). Every individual has the potential to contribute to a society that will inevitably flourish. This unlimited freedom is key to a cooperative society, to reveal the true capabilities of the individual. Therefore, it is evident that Goldman and Du Bois agree that the individual has a lot to offer society and this can only be done through strong communities. However, what differentiates Goldman from Du Bois, is that she argues for anarchism as the solution, a philosophy that Du Bois contests.

Whilst Goldman and Du Bois agree that education is a paramount factor in achieving emancipation, their views on what an ideal society looks like differentiate vastly. Goldman’s view that the state is inherently corrupt reinforces her ideal of Anarchism. Anarchism, according to Goldman would create “a new social order based on liberty unrestricted by man-made law” (1910: 17). Goldman argues that the state creates an environment that indoctrinates people to go against their potential, interests, and desires. Anarchism, alternatively, would create a society which would fuel desire to be used constructively (Goldman, 1910: 19). Whilst Goldman was an ardent advocate of Anarchism, Du Bois’ commitment to communism was tentative. Instead, he advocated a society based around Pan-Africanism (Bell, 2014: 10). Du Bois argued that a commitment to Pan-Africanism would “eradicate racism, colonialism, and all structures of exploitation” (Bell, 2014: 10). This movement would benefit everyone in society to ensure “democracy, equality, and social justice” (Bell, 2014: 12). Du Bois, unlike Goldman, did not believe in removing government. He argued that through reason, individual mind-sets could be revised where people of colour would eventually be given the same rights as their white counterparts. Whilst on the surface it may seem that Pan-Africanism and Anarchism contradict one another, there are significant similarities between the two. Goldman and Du Bois share the same purpose of eradicating the exploitation faced by the minority. As well as this, both concepts argue that people are able to effectively rule themselves. And so, it is evident that these two concepts are more similar than different in terms of their beliefs on how society should be structured.

One significant difference between Goldman and Du Bois is their method of how an ideal society will emerge. Goldman argues that the shackles that constrain society must be eliminated through revolution (Waldstreicher, 1990: 79). For Goldman, defiance, direct action and political violence is used as a means of achieving Anarchism. It is only through removing the corruption and injustice of revolutionary practices (state, religion and property) that society can be truly emancipated (Waldstreicher, 1990: 78). The state, religion, and property, according to Goldman is a form of power that is restrictive and despotic, preventing individual development and growth (Waldstreicher, 1990: 78). On the other hand, Du Bois argues for social justice to emerge, a more empirical approach is required. Social conscience cannot be achieved by “sheer expansion” (Du Bois, 1905: 53) rather there has to be a balance between research and activism (Williams, 1960: 44). Instead of the use of violence, Du Bois form of personal sacrifice consisted of inspiring college educated students to fulfil their duty in the support for freedom and equality (Williams, 1960: 48). For Du Bois, research and activism was a means of “pursuing the goal of a just society through normative values and ideas” (Williams, 1960: 44). However, he argues for a “just society” to transpire, one needs to recognise themselves “in the image of one’s neighbour” (Du Bois, 1905: 53). Correspondingly, Du Bois argues that religion is the intrinsic link in binding society together. It is only through intimately understanding one another can true emancipation and social conscience begin to materialise (1905: 54). Thus, it is evident that this debate between reform versus revolution uncovers the disparities between Du Bois and Goldman. Whilst Du Bois focused on attempting to change the mentality and beliefs of the elite, Goldman argued that a revolution was the only means to ensure that a change in the political system was inevitable.

Du Bois and Goldman whilst on the surface are not often paired side by side, it is evident that these two activists have much more in common than acknowledged. Now 100 years since Goldman published “Anarchism and other essays” and 150 years since the birth of Du Bois, the relevance of their thinking still significant. Speaking out about how women are underrepresented in society, Goldman argues “are we to assume that the poison already inherent in politics will be decreased, if women were to enter the political arena?’ (1910: 84). 2017 statistics revealed only 52 out of 650 MPs are BAME and only 32% of MPs are female (Guardian, 2017). This reveals how issues of underrepresentation and white supremacist institutions continue to discriminate the minority. Similarly, Du Bois’ concept of the “colour line” is still relevant where statistics revealed a 12.8% pay gap between white and black workers (Guardian, 2017). Therefore, it is evident that both activists have been prolific in shaping history and thought, and continue to do so over 100 years later. Therefore, more similarities link them together than differences, where for both thinkers the role of the individual is crucial towards achieving emancipation.

Du Bois’ Theory Of Double Consciousness

Identity is a complex process of constant adaptation. Every day individuals are forced to assimilate and modify their identities to avoid becoming victims of oppression and discrimination. In the United States, people of color and immigrants must overcome the historically ingrained prejudices that have been established within American society. They are categorized based on their physical characteristics, cultural background, and upheld values. These attributes are used to construct an identity based on social structures and institutional systems that ascribe privilege and power. Although an individual’s name is usually maintained over time, an identity in itself is flexible and constantly changing.

In the early 20th century, the identity of African Americans was masked with racial segregation and oppression. The lives of black individuals were dominated by white culture to the point that their own rights became unknown. William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was an African-American activist who challenged the ideology of white supremacy and advocated for the civil rights of black individuals. In his work, The Souls of the Black Folk, Du Bois presents a concept that addresses the African American experience in America — double consciousness. Double consciousness highlights the identity crisis that inhibits black individuals from representing themselves in American culture. This concept reveals that people of color have an identity that is split into multiple pieces which prevent them from developing a sense of self. “An American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body” (Du Bois 3). In this quote, Du Bois displays African Americans’ constant battle to unify their black subculture with their American identity. This quote further illustrates black individuals’ constant struggle to transition between two Americas; one that is white and one that is black. These communities must compromise their identity to assimilate into society. But even then, they are not fully acknowledged as black individuals or as “Americans”.

The film “Crazy Rich Asians”, depicts the identity crisis experienced by children of immigrants in America. In this film, Rachel Chu, a first-generation Chinese American, is criticized for having an American background. When she meets her boyfriend’s family, she is told that although she appears Asian and speaks the Mandarin language, she is not a true Chinese. Rachel is also criticized for prioritizing her career before her family; a value that goes against Chinese traditions. In the eyes of ethnic Chinese individuals, Rachel is too “American”. But in the U.S., Rachel is more likely to experience social exclusion and discrimination due to her Chinese background. Like Rachel, several first-generation Americans feel disconnected from their cultural identity. These tensions alienate individuals from their non-immigrant American peers and pressure them to assimilate into the dominant culture. At the end of the film, Rachel attempts to bridge the gap between her Chinese and American identities. Rachel takes pride as an independent woman and embraces her socioeconomic status and cross-cultural background. Although balancing two cultures is not as simple as bringing two magnets with opposite ends together, Rachel’s story attempts to show the probability of uniting multiple conflicting identities.

I am a first-generation Latino American who straddles two identities: one as a Mexican and the other as an American. Throughout my childhood, my parents taught me to take pride in my Mexican heritage. But in school, I was scolded for speaking the Spanish language and was mocked for being unable to pronounce English words correctly. I felt pressured to assimilate into mainstream white culture and hid my Mexican identity to be perceived as “normal”. These events pruned my Mexican roots. Despite my efforts to mold my identity, I was constantly reminded that I was not an American. When I visited my family in Mexico last summer, my Mexican identity was questioned. Although I celebrated the same holidays and spoke the same language as them, I was perceived as a “white-washed Mexican”.

As a Mexican American, I can relate to Du Bois’ theory of double consciousness. Every day, the environment and people around me influence the identity that I present to the world. At the University of Washington, I subconsciously transition between multiple identities to be accepted by the community around me. In school events, lectures, and office hours I present an Americanized version of myself. I exhibit an educated student who can express himself in the English language. But when I find myself in a Latino community, I feel free to embrace my Mexican culture and speak broken English with “mis paisanos”.

Contributions Of Web Dubois On Racism Issues

Introduction

There are very few people in the world whose footprint continues to dominate how we understand and study human beings today. William Edward Burghardt (W.E.B.) Du Bois and his research on the issues of racism have left an impressionable impact on sociology and sociological research. The focus of my paper is W.E.B Du Bois and his tireless work towards breaking the stereotypes surrounding black people. He defies all the odds against him and his people. Du Bois did not let white supremacists and oppression block him from pursuing success. He earned multiple bachelor degrees and a PhD from Harvard University in an age where African Americans are categorized as biologically inferior (Morris, 2017, p. 4). Du Bois did not internalize the hateful stereotypes against his race. Instead, he flipped the script and thrived in educating himself and earning prestige for his studies. Being the first African American to graduate from Harvard University with a PhD, he radiates a powerful influence on marginalized groups in society (Morris, 2017, p. 4). Du Bois worked his entire life to break the racial oppression of people of colour. He transformed sociology into what it is today.

Historical Issues

Colonization in the late 18th century initiates the emergence of racial discrimination and racial inferiority. As European countries are replacing Native land with an exploitative industry, the working class composed of black people start to suffer segregation (Seltzer, 2017, p. 3). In an economy where African Americans are characterized as biologically inferior to white people, W.E.B. Du Bois’s work only appears in the margins. America is racist in every aspect, including its study of sociology (Morris, 2017, p. 2-3). Morris (2017) reveals black people are hung from trees and did not have the right to vote (p. 3). They are treated like animals by white people, rather than human beings with rights and freedoms (Morris, 2017, p. 3). America classifies itself as a democratic country, however, that label is inconsistent with the segregation of black people. To rationalize the oppression and isolation between the races, white supremacy begins to validate the argument of racial inferiority (Morris, 2017, p. 3). The idea that black people belong in the bottom of society because their DNA is naturally inferior to white people becomes appropriated (Morris, 2017, p. 3). In other words, God created African Americans biologically less than ‘normal humans,’ therefore, black people permanently and rightfully belong to the bottom of the social ladder (Morris, 2017, p. 3). This ideology is popularized during Du Bois’s era which is why his work was never recognized in the 19th century. Regardless, Du Bois did not allow white supremacy to stunt his brilliance. He rose up against the bigotry and became one of the world’s most educated persons (Morris, 2017, p. 4). Du Bois understood that the social sciences are built on the racist ideas of white scholars (Morris, 2017, p. 4). He rejects the notion that black people are biologically inferior and insists that this conception of racism stems from opinion, not facts (Morris, 2017, p. 4). Du Bois actively focuses on constructing a new social science that incorporates science. To achieve this, he aimed to conduct studies among black people who are victims of racism to discredit the ignorant beliefs of white scholars (Morris, 2017, p. 4). Du Bois explicitly states that “the ultimate evil was stupidity,” not “black DNA” (Morris, 2017, p. 4-5). Understanding that Du Bois was a positivist, he pushed for the use of a scientific method which includes utilizing quantitate data methods and empirical studies (Morris, 2017, p. 5). According to Du Bois, one cannot justify nor establish ‘sociological truths’ from inside of their office. He coined this concept as the ‘car window’ sociology because white scholars were problematizing black people in America without actually interacting or studying them (Morris, 2017, p. 5). This lead to the promotion of racist ideologies (Morris, 2017, p. 5). Du Bois counteracted this error in his work by doing fieldwork with the help of no one (Ritzer, 2017, p. 197). He achieved this by placing himself in the realities of suppressed black people. Du Bois’s work impacts sociology significantly because he is one of the first social scientists to link colonialism with racism (Morris, 2017, p. 6). He intimates white scholars because his work threatens tradition (Seltzer, 2017, p. 10). Du Bois’s work is not included in sociology during his time because sociologists were composed of white scholars who chose to ignore the ideologies of a black man (Ritzer, 2017, p. 189).

Theoretical Contributions

Du Bois contributes many theories to our understanding of sociology concerning the issues of racism. This includes his fundamental ideas of the Veil and double consciousness. To begin, Du Bois references the Veil as a delicate barricade separating white people from African Americans (Ritzer, 2017, p. 204). In general, a veil is typically transparent and thin in material. This barricade separating the two races is delicate because the Veil between them is not opaque. However, it acts as a division of different races (Ritzer, 2017, p. 204). Du Bois’s goal of lifting the Veil appears in his book, The Souls of Black Folk, where he describes his intention and desire of the “souls of black people in America” to be seen by white people (Ritzer, 2017, p. 204). Referring back to our description of a veil, Du Bois sometimes describes the Veil between the races as more opaque than transparent. Also, instead of it being a thin material, he expresses the Veil as frequently heavy or weighted making it very difficult to lift (Ritzer, 2017, p. 204). To emphasize, W.E.B. Du Bois visions the Veil as something black people are always born with. It separates them from opportunity, education, and their communities (Ritzer, 2017, p. 204). The Veil essentially locks them away from the rest of society which harms everyone, including white people (Ritzer, 2017, p. 204). Furthermore, Du Bois recognizes that the idea of the Veil disappearing anytime soon is highly unlikely. To completely remove the Veil between the different races is a life long journey (Ritzer, 2017, p. 205). Corresponding with his concept of the Veil, Du Bois constructs the analogy of the ‘double consciousness’ which identifies his version of the ‘self’ (Morris, 2017, p. 7). Du Bois defines the self as a product of social interactions with other individuals in the community in the presence of influences such as “race and power” (Morris, 2017, p. 7). The term double consciousness implies that people of colour look at the product of their self through the eyes of others, more specifically, white people (Ritzer, 2017, p. 205). African Americans tend to experience double consciousness because their black identity is repressed through racism by white Americans (Ritzer, 2017, p. 205). Therefore, their black status is divided from their American status. Those two identifications are not integrated into their internalized self. Du Bois mentions a complementary concept linked to his theory of double consciousness which he refers to as ‘twoness’. Du Bois writes on twoness as “an America, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warning ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder” (Ritzer, 2017, p. 205). The systematic racism and oppression African Americans are constantly facing interferes with the development of their true oneself. Their black identity encourages them to embrace their culture and freedoms (Ritzer, 2017, p. 205). However, the persecution and suffering they face from being black diminish or reduces their black identity (Ritzer, 2017, p. 205). Ritzer (2017) refers to African Americans as being both “insiders and outsiders” of society (p. 206). This produces tensions and strains within African Americans themselves as they are placed in a conflicting arrangement (Ritzer, 2017, p. 206). Their internalized self has trouble forming because white people outcast them from being citizens. The lack of social interaction with the dominant white society clashes with their black identity. Therefore, they experience twoness because both of their identifications are incompatible, severely harming the construction of their unique self (Ritzer, 2017, p. 206).

Contemporary Relevance

Racial discrimination continues to exist in contemporary societies. Du Bois’s work does not go unnoticed by many social theorists today and people who are standing up to racism. Specifically, the younger generation is fighting for change through political movements (Morris, 2017, p. 10). During the time of Du Bois, young black students led protests to address the injustice of African Americans (Morris, 2017, p. 11). Du Bois encourages young people to fight back the oppression that guards them against equality (Morris, 2017, p. 11). In comparison, contemporary societies witness similar movements like the symbolic Black Lives Matter. It targets discrimination black people experience (Morris, 2017, p. 10). The Black Live Matter movement and the protests during Du Bois’s era are both led by the younger generation and fight racist ideology (Morris, 2017, p. 10). The ideas of Du Bois are relevant today because racism has not disappeared. People of colour are still the victims of discrimination and suffering because their skin colour is not white. Du Bois’s analogy on car window sociology is also important to recognize today. Social theorists should not formulate sociological truths from speculation (Morris, 2017, p. 4). To truly understand the nature of something or someone, the theorist should place themselves within the context or the lives of what they are studying (Morris, 2017, p. 4). Du Bois gives his full dedication to conducting empirical studies. He led interviews among families to collect his data (Seltzer, 2017, p. 8). It is morally unjust and ignorant for a theorist to claim black people are inferior with no supporting evidence. Du Bois’s double consciousness may also help deepen the understanding of the hardships black people endure. We must grasp the idea that many people of colour, especially immigrants, have a hard time integrating into society because they are not fully recognized as a member. Following the ideas of Ritzer (2017), immigrants are displaced both inside and outside the community (p. 206). In comparison to modern western societies, immigrants have noticeable dissimilar customs and culture. The transition of ‘fitting in’ and maintaining their foreign identity is difficult. They often face alienation from their community or pretend to be someone they are not. Du Bois established theories that are crucial in the world we live in today. To disregard or ignore his theories would be a crime.

Conclusion

W.E.B Du Bois, in general, is one of the most important persons in history. His contributions have made a significant impact that continues to be influential and necessary for humans today. For a black man in the 19th century to be writing and fighting against racism fearlessly, he requires great courage and determination. Du Bois is a hero in my eyes because he rose up against all of the hateful assumptions of black people and proved them to be wrong. His theories on the Veil and double consciousness are very critical today. Although societies have advanced, the persecution many people face because of how they look or what their faith continues to occur. It is important to recognize that racism has not vanished. I learnt that Du Bois created the first scientific school of sociology at Atlanta University (Morris, 2017, p. 1). His bravery and intelligence made him a momentous historic figure.

Theme Of Slavery In The Souls Of Black Folk By W. E. B. Du Bois And Up From Slavery By Booker Washington

Within the literary canon of African American literature, two of the most influential works of that canon would undoubtedly have to be Up from Slavery by Booker T Washington, and The Souls of Black Folk by W. E. B. Du Bois. Within these two works, both authors put forth their own ideological solutions to the problems which are faced by African Americans in the 20th century. One arguing for uplifting African Americans through hard work and education within regards to certain practical work skills at the expense of obtaining civil rights, the other arguing that while it is important to get an education, only true racial uplift can be gained by also pursuing civil rights for African Americans. According to Houston A. Baker Jr. who specializes in African American literature, not only would these literary works become so influential as to define the political philosophies of generations to come, but they also represent two very important concepts within his own personal view of African American literature. These two concepts are the mastery of form and the deformation of mastery. The objective of this paper is to compare and contrast the two differing ideologies of these two significant authors as well as to demonstrate how their work acts as the ideal representations of the aforementioned concepts.

Though they had been freed, the Reconstruction era after the civil war failed to secure the rights of African Americans as citizens. By the late 19th century lynchings, segregation laws, and restrictions on their ability to vote practically made the rights guaranteed to them by the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments after the war meaningless. During the post reconstruction years in the United States, the primary concern amongst the intellectuals of the African American community were to come up with a solution as to how they could come to live within a society that still refused to recognize them as equals. Two intellectuals emerged with their own ideas as to how to solve this conundrum. These intellectuals, known well within the pages of American history, are Booker T Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois. Learning from their own life experiences, both men developed their own methods as to how they wanted to improve upon the plight of the African American.

Booker T. Washington was born as a slave on a farm in western Virginia. The exact month, date and year of his birth are unknown as a result of slavery, however the year 1856 is what one will find on his headstone. The rest of his ancestry also remains quite a mystery. Together with his older brother and younger sister, his mother, Jane, an African American woman who was herself enslaved, raised him. The exact identity of his father is unknown, though it is well understood that he was a white man. It is accurate to say that much of the Booker T Washington’s ideology was influenced by his upbringing. In his book Up From Slavery he writes, “From the time that I can remember anything, almost every day of my life has been occupied in some kind of labor,” (Washington 13). Through his earliest years from being born on a slave plantation, to seeking employment at the age of nine, Washington learned the value of two things, labor and education.

As a young boy Washington was sent to work in salt factories and coal mines, while at the same time working as a houseboy for a white family. Due to Abraham Lincoln’s issuing of the emancipation proclamation this would prove to be somewhat actual employment as opposed to slave labor. As far as education was concerned Washington began taking night classes at a school which was open to African Americans. He would eventually be allowed to participate in the day classes for a few months. From then on young Booker’s schedule would be comprised of him getting up early in the morning to work until nine, and return for at least two more hours of work straight away after the school was closed in the afternoon. So after he was done working in the salt and coal, Washington officially began and would continue his education at the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in Virginia.

Upon entering Hampton, Washington learned to value the importance of receiving an education. Though perhaps such is not an accurate statement as it seems he always had an appreciation for learning. He writes, “I determined, when quite a small child, that, if I accomplished nothing else in life, I would in some way get enough education to enable me to read common books and newspapers,” (Washington 34). It is to be understood that his desire for education sparked from his aspiration to read. However one could argue that his time at Hampton only made him come to know the true value of receiving an official education. In addition to this, he also began to further understand and learn the value of hard work. Washington would work as a janitor in order to pay for his tuition. During his time at Hampton he would soon find himself being taken under the wing of the institute’s founder, General Samuel Chapman Armstrong, who came to view him as his favorite pupil. Under Armstrong’s tutelage, Washington learned the value of maintaining self-control, upholding moral standards, and seeking practical training in the business of trade.

After graduating from Hampton, Washington taught at an elementary school in his home town for a few years. General Armstrong would eventually ask him to return to Hampton in the year 1880. In time Washington’s mentor would soon nominate him to become the head of a new school in the city of Tuskegee, Alabama. This school would come to be known as the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute. This institute’s primary purpose would be to train African Americans in teaching and farming methods along with the training needed to become skilled workers. Washington would particularly come to advocate for the notion of industrial education. He saw it as a means of aiding in the advancement of his people. He believed that African Americans needed to focus primarily on educating themselves, specifically by learning how to engage in useful trades, and by investing in their own businesses. Through their demonstration of hard work, and economic progress, Washington believed that African Americans would be able to prove how they were of value to the United Sates’ economy. This in turn would hopefully change how they were to be perceived in the eyes of white people. By gaining financial independence and the ability to demonstrate themselves as productive citizens, what would ultimately occur is that African Americans would achieve full equality.

It was understood that there was to be a condition to this philosophy. In order for African Americans to focus on these priorities, any demands for civil rights needed to be put aside for the time being. In 1895, Washington would express these views of his in a speech he gave to a mixed-race audience at the Cotton State and International Exhibition, in the state of Atlanta. He would garner support from two groups. The first was comprised of African Americans who trusted in his approach’s realistic judgment, whereas the second was comprised of white Americans who were contented with prolonging any serious discussion regarding the sociopolitical equality for African Americans until some other time. For all this support, Washington’s view would also garner much disapproval from a great many critics, one of them being none other than W. E. B. Du Bois.

Born William Edward Burghardt Du Bois on February 23, 1868 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, Du Bois grew up in a city that was predominantly white. In 1885, he attended Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. It was there that he came into contact with the Jim Crow laws, and for the first time began to truly understand racism in America. Du Bois would eventually come to teach at a college in Ohio for a brief time. Afterwards he became the director of a major study on the social conditions of African Americans. After completing his research, he came to the conclusion that the very thing that was keeping African Americans from acquiring well-paying jobs was purely discrimination from the White population of the United States. He certainly despised such discrimination, but what one can imagine for him was worse than a white person engaging in prejudice, was a black person who encouraged such discriminatory behavior, effectively helping white people deny African Americans the means necessary to advance as a people. This is particularly what he views Booker T Washington is doing.

Within the book The Souls of Black Folk there is a chapter in which Du Bois particularly looks into Washington’s perspective. In this particular chapter known as “Of Mr. Washington and Others” Du Bois criticizes his point of view. He makes his criticism known by first recognizing Washington’s view as somewhat backward. He writes, “Mr. Washington represents in Negro thought the old attitude of adjustment and submission,” (Du Bois 23). To further explain his point Du Bois provides an overview of what it is exactly that Washington is calling for. In order for African Americans to survive, what Washington advises them to do is in some way to become submissive towards the system they currently live in. He advises they do so by effectively surrendering three things. First their potential for political power, second any supposed claims they have to civil rights, and third their access to higher education. Instead, Washington feels it is best to put the efforts of African Americans towards teaching themselves how to accumulate wealth through industrial education and achieve southern reconciliation.

Du Bois recognizes this point of view as having been the dominant way of thinking for over fifteen years. But unfortunately while this view may have been the dominant way, what has come of it is nothing to be desired. As a result of this way of thinking, African Americans have only been further disenfranchised. Legally they have been further relegated to a status in society which only presents them as something inferior. Also any aid they would receive from institutions dedicated to their higher education has been withdrawn. Though Du Bois acknowledges that these things are not the direct result of Washington’s ideology, he can’t help but state that his point of view has had quite a hand in exacerbating the social situation regarding the place of African Americans in society which only sped up the creation of such problems.

Choosing not only to judge Washington’s view on the basis of what is to be perceived as its outcome, Du Bois also criticizes his point of view based on its own merits, which he sees as nothing more than a series of paradoxes. While Washington wants to make businessmen and property owners of African Americans, Du bois finds it impossible for African Americans to be expected to engage in such occupations, or at least advance in such occupations, unless they have the right to vote. For what was the point in achieving economic gains that were in no way secured unless they were protected by political power? Du bois finds it particularly paradoxical that Washington, “Insists on thrift and self-respect, but at the same time counsels a silent submission to civic inferiority such as is bound to sap of manhood of any race in the long run,” (Du Bois 24). He wonders how the man can come to advise one to have self-respect, yet at the same time tell one to engage in something that only may work to reinforce undesirable notions of what one’s place is in the world, in effect only telling them to stay in the same place they’ve been in for years, a place that did not exactly encourage such respect.

As the third and final paradoxical way of thinking, Du Bois asserts how Washington seems to place industrial training above institutions of higher learning. He finds this to be paradoxical because from his perspective the places of learning that Washington cherishes so much would be useless and wouldn’t remain open for a single day unless it were for the teachers who are trained in higher learning institutions who are employed in such places. By the end of the chapter Du Bois strangely enough asserts that while one should in some way rejoice in Washington’s success, and what he has done for African Americans, one cannot help but criticize him for what one can perceive a Washington acting as somewhat of an apologist for racial injustice, and for his inability to recognize the importance of seeking all the civil rights that African Americans are owed as citizens. Du Bois argues in his book that the only way for African Americans to achieve social justice was not only to pursue an education, but also to pursue civil rights, and that by abandoning the pursuit of these things, one is only strengthening the idea that they should be seen in American society as nothing more than second-class citizens.

There are quite a few problems with Du Bois’ assessment of Washington’s perspective. His perception of Washington’s view of scholarly pursuits versus industrial education is one of them. Washington’s assertion as to the significance of industrial education did not mean he felt that being able to fully master scholarly subjects was out of the realm of possibilities for African-Americans, nor should they all completely surrender their access to it. He simply believed that there were more practical or important subjects to be taught. Another being that despite what Du Bois might think, It was never Washington’s intention that African Americans should accept their inferiority, but rather that they should be instructed on how to do things out of necessity. Also as far Washington becoming an apologist for racial injustice by trying to appeal to white, as well as black audiences supposedly arguing in some form to maintain racial separation, for Washington two things were paramount in his thinking. One was that the two races had to live together, the other being that as they lived together, they could learn to coexist symbiotically. He seemed to look forward to a society with a beneficent biracial coexistence with whites. According to him by both races, working and eventually fully interacting with each other, American society could flourish as such a paradise. The racial problem would eventually fade into nothing, and the efforts, as well as the accomplishments of African-Americans would be rewarded as white people would learn to appreciate their contributions. Much like Du Bois Washington did believe in change, in fact he saw it as an inevitability, but unlike Du Bois he did not believe that such change could be so radical as to have it occur practically overnight.

What Du Bois further fails to understand about Washington’s program of education is that the program was in many ways a product of its time in that it was designed to deal with a more deprived group of African-American people who seemed to require instruction on the most fundamental of subjects. Many African-Americans had neither the skills nor the expertise necessary to make progress in the economic domain during the Reconstruction era. A large portion of the population had sunk into a period of never ending debt as a result of sharecropping in Alabama’s Black Belt, where the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute was situated. Industrial education was seen as a means which provided an opportunity for these people to obtain the tools needed to function in society by learning how to engage in trade. From Washington’s perspective it would have been pointless to create a training program that would not seek to improve the societal status of African-American population as a whole. Thus whatever program was to be created, it had to effectively be able to educate the poorest of the population. Washington was trying to show them how to be self-sufficient by teaching his students how to work effectively and in doing so prosper in American society. Furthermore it was more than just being able to get by in life by that self-sufficiency. It gave them a sense comprehension. Meaning that not only did he make it his mission to teach his students how to do things , but also how to solve whatever problems they may face later on in life. Additionally Washington believed that African Americans had an unreasonable desire to start at the top. This was principally ridiculous as not only did they lack sufficient skills to justify this desire, but there would be increasing animosity amongst the white population in pushing for such a thing as a result.

While Washington and DuBois had many points of disagreement, similarities also existed between their respected philosophies. Both men out of principle were both firmly opposed to any all forms of racially motivated violence against African Americans such as lynching. Both men in their own ways found value with receiving an education, and with respect still found ways to appreciate their accomplishments. But most importantly, while both men can be, and have been criticized on different elements of their philosophies, both of them still acted as prominent figures whose roles greatly influenced the advancement of their people. Furthermore, not only did they greatly influence the advance in their people’s political power, but they also had much influence within regards to African American self-expression.

Houston A. Baker Jr is a scholar at Vanderbilt University who specializes in African American literature. In his approach to African American literature, two concepts emerge. These are the concepts of the mastery of form and the deformation of mastery. The concept of the mastery of form is when an artist, in order to make themselves known, writes their work within the metaphorical confines of a literary tradition. In the book Modernism and the Harlem Renaissance Houston A. Baker Jr. finds that Washington’s work falls into such a tradition, specifically the tradition of minstrelsy. In the early 19th century, minstrelsy was a form of entertainment that depicted African Americans, sometimes played by both white and black people, as a happy, dancing, music performing characters.

These acts would come to play an important role in shaping how African Americans were to be viewed within American society. This form of entertainment reinforced the racist stereotype that they were uneducated, musical, and always happy. In this particular sense Baker is interested more with the profound cultural significance of Minstrelsy, however, and not so much with the act. To give an explanation as to how he views the concept of mastery of form, Baker uses the analogy of a praying mantis. To further illustrate this point, he uses the work of a zoologist by the name of H.B Cott to explain the significance of such an analogy. He writes, “The praying mantis is an insect whose ‘allaesthetic’ characteristics allow it to master the form of the green stalk so completely that predators-at a distance, and even close at hand-cannot distinguish its edibility,” (Baker 50). In this case the mastery of form is associated with a kind of cryptic mask akin to the kind of mask African Americans have had to use, much like the praying mantis, to survive.

As for how this applies to Up From Slavery, much like the mantis, Washington also uses a kind of mask of sorts in order to achieve some kind of purpose, according to Baker. To him Washington is perfectly aware of how to use the strategy of gaining liberation by manipulating the mask for revolutionary reasons. This is particularly brought to light within the speech Washington gave in 1895. Within his speech, Washington uses certain aspects of what are perceived to be the lives of African Americans. These notions are of course exaggerated stereotypes of the real thing conjured up in the minds of supremacists who sought to further demonstrate their supremacy by bombarding those who they found to be undesirable with images and ideas that worked to reinforce how they were considerably lesser than them. But never the less Washington uses them anyway. What baker notices such aspects are merely included by design as a means of playing along with the ideas so as to in a sense appease the crowd.

Washington uses such things as if to almost put on a mask, the same cryptic mask worn by many African Americans before him, to play the part in a way like a thespian upon who puts on a persona which the audience already expects him to have. He plays the part of the good Negro they already expect him to be. But, unlike those who came before him, Washington is not simply using the mask to survive, but to thrive. Once appeased the crowd is perhaps more inclined to listen as to what Washington has to say. More inclined to hear his message as to the issues that were facing the African American community, the message of what their problems are and how they can be remedied. This can prove to be quite useful due to the fact in which by appearing to be more complacent and less radical, those who are in a position of privilege and power are not only more persuaded to hear his position, but their also persuaded to support him in his mission.

In contrast to the mastery of form, the concept of the deformation of mastery is when an artist decides to write something which effectively goes against a literary tradition, rather than working within it. Baker particularly views The Souls of Black Folk as an excellent example of this concept. To him this work of literature is Du Bois’ way of demonstrating the need for a revolution. This is demonstrated as the book goes over the decades of the sufferings of African Americans. Much like the gorilla that rises on its hind legs when confronted with an intruder in its natural habitat, beating its chest while hooting, engaging in what is known as a phaneric display, Du Bois boldly advertises his radical approach as to achieve freedom from what they suffer. Unlike Washington he does choose to use methods of placating to an audience of white folks using pleasing stereotypes. He does not wish to call upon past notions of what an African American is supposed to be to advance his people in society, for to him such a thing is self-defeating. Rather he wishes to create a new revolutionary visage of the American Negro, a new Negro, one who is just as capable of creating an identity worthy of gaining the same political rights equal to that of the white man.

In comparing the two perhaps it is best to be the mantis rather than the gorilla. True the gorilla may cause the most damage, and attempt to bring about more change in an entirely radical fashion, but the problem with gorillas is their size along with their actions can cause massive counter reactions that may even lead to the gorilla’s death as no one wants to have to be destroyed by an unruly gorilla. With the insect however, well, no one is as concerned with the insect, as their doesn’t appear to be much evidence that such a little thing will cause as much damage as its primate counterpart. Thus those who acknowledge its existence don’t feel agitated by it, which gives the praying mantis exactly what it wants as it pacifies its potential predators who cannot determine whether it is worth worrying about giving it plenty of time to slowly but surely trying to get what it wants with almost impunity. Perhaps Washington’s ideas were best as unlike Du Bois he recognize the importance of convincing the white establishment to aid him in helping African Americans rather than stirring up animosity between the races by making such radical, and revolutionary demands such as equal civil rights. Though the gradual change may naturally take longer than the radical, what it also has is perhaps much less violence as a result.

The whole purpose of this paper was to compare and contrast the two different ideologies put forth by these two important writers, as well as to show how their works act as the ideal representations of the mastery of form, and the deformation of mastery. For all intents and purposes, it appears as though that is what it has done. These men were towering figures within their community. They sought as best they could based off the knowledge they had gained through their own experiences as to how to help their own people. Sure they disagreed with one another as to how to help them, but such is to be expected. So long as there are at least two people upon the Earth, let alone in America, there will always be disagreement as to how to do things the right way. But despite their differences, they still understand that they shared a common goal in life. A rather noble goal one might say.