Let America be America then: imagining a more united front in the early civil rights era.
Dennis, Michael
Eric Porter, The Problem of the Future World: W. E. B. Du Bois and
the Race Concept at Midcentury (Durham and London: Duke University
Press, 2010)
Barbara Foley, Wrestling with the Left: The Making of Ralph
Ellison's Invisible Man (Durham and London: Duke University Press,
2010)
IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE REBELLIOUS 1960s, writing about black
activism meant writing about Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee,
Congress of Racial Equality, and the Freedom Rides. How could it not?
Young black and white activists courageously overturned the structures
of Jim Crow and set the example for subsequent movements of liberation.
They rejected the litigious moderation of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People, demonstrated the utility of
nonviolent direct action tactics, and exemplified the ethic of
participatory democracy that defined the New Left. In short, the
activists who transformed their confinement in Parchman Penitentiary
into a badge of honour set the tone for an era of idealism. They also
captured the imagination of historians shaped by its dramatic events.
In this movement, and in the chronicles written by its earliest
historians, labour unions and political economy figured only
incidentally. The bravery and audacity of young activists or the
malfeasance and cynicism of liberal politicians mattered most. (2) Even
when historians turned their attention to organizations inspired by
Black Nationalism, the focus tended to be on how violent revolutionaries
undermined a movement defined by interracial cooperation and liberal
pragmatism. (3) Of course, historians explored earlier episodes of
racial rebellion, including those surrounding Marcus Garvey, the Harlem
Renaissance, and the black nationalism of the antebellum era. (4) Yet
the evidence of the connection between black protest and organized
labour remained subordinate at best. Moreover, the earlier examples of
civil rights activism were seen as mere precursors to the full
flourishing of the 'real' civil rights movements. Like many
civil rights activists, they saw the movement as sui generis, born out
of the unique zeitgeist of the New Frontier, owing nothing to the Old
Left, which now seemed as much part of the problem as the solution.
Over the past 20 years, historians have gradually modified that
focus. They have questioned the presupposition that the depression years
simply paved the way for the 'classic' phase of Montgomery to
Selma. (5) They now assess the relationship between organized labour and
the civil rights movement, often coming to diametrically opposed
conclusions. (6) Using evidence that Black Power groups contributed to
community improvement by addressing concrete social needs, they have
challenged the assertion that black militancy meant destructive racial
separatism. (7) Responding to a number of stimuli, including the gradual
disappearance of race from political debate (which was inversely
proportional to its incendiary prominence in the culture wars of the
1990s), historians reinvigorated the study of black civil rights. They
pushed the chronological boundaries backward, studying the political
possibilities as well as the glaring inadequacies of the New Deal for
black equality. Increasingly it was not a matter of when the civil
rights movement began, but the character of the movement that developed
in those years. For many historians, including Eric Porter, that
movement was transnational, cosmopolitan, and distinctively radical.
Foreign relations now matter in the long view of the civil rights
movement.
In it, the celebratory tone of civil rights historiography
diminished. (8) This was an analysis informed as much by frustration as
by hope. In a period in which conservative agitators fused crime,
welfare, and blackness in the public mind, what hope was there to
reverse the trends toward disproportionate black incarceration,
homelessness, unemployment, poverty, and income inequality? Turning to
the period before the Brown v. Board of Education decision, historians
asked: How did the New Deal era create the conditions for persistent
black poverty and powerlessness? Might the epoch of labour and political
radicalism offer a usable history to an era in which right-wing
demagogues deployed the most vicious of racial stereotypes to slash away
at the social contract? Could studies of radical political organizations
such as the National Negro Congress illuminate paths not taken,
particularly since that movement failed to achieve economic justice for
African Americans? If the movement for racial justice had, in fact,
become bogged down in esoteric questions of racial identity and cultural
'empowerment,' what were the alternative visions from the
past?
The decline of the New Deal order also fostered a growing desire to
understand what black and white workers had lost in the process. When a
growing public consensus--fuelled by conservative pundits and the
rightward shift in American politics--maintained that the civil rights
movement had never aimed to achieve anything more than a colour-blind
society, historians responded, exploring what would come to be known as
'the long civil rights movement.'
In a pivotal article in the Journal of American History, Jacquelyn
Dowd Hall encapsulated this developing perspective but also decisively
advanced it. Hall argued that the movement that developed in the 1930s
and 40s was deeply enmeshed in the popular front values of that era. At
the center of it was the connection between race and class. (9) The
commitments to antifascism, industrial democracy, and social democratic
reform defined this phase of the drive for black equality.
"Proceeding from the assumption that ... racism has been bound up
with economic exploitation," Hall writes, "civil rights
unionists sought to combine protection from discrimination with
universalistic social welfare policies and individual rights with labor
rights." (10) The Communist Party and the CIO were decisive if not
controlling institutions. According to proponents of this thesis, this
movement was more radical, more focused on questions of political
economy, more amenable to the idea that the fortunes of race and labour
were intertwined in these years than it would ever be again.
Yet proponents of this perspective also want to underline
continuity. Hall acknowledges the dislocating impact of anticommunism on
the movement, but she and others stress the persistence of the
class-race connection beyond 1940s, into the post-Brown v. Board of
Education decision. (11) This was not simply a matter of
"antecedents" but of "origins." (12) Historians of
this persuasion have argued that the movement that emerged after the
Montgomery Bus Boycott expressed social democratic commitments that
right-wing versions of Martin Luther King's allegedly colour-blind
'dream' would expunge from memory. (13)
Of course, this schematic is a little too neat to accommodate the
diversity and volume of writing on civil rights over the past 40 years.
For example, Richard Dalfiume wrote "The Forgotten Years of the
Negro Revolution," a groundbreaking article that explored the
antecedents of black protest in the turbulent years of the New Deal era.
That article was written in 1968. (14) And as early as 1983, historian
Mark Naison was reinterpreting the impact of Communist Party activism in
New York, examining in a sympathetic light its efforts to defend the
Scottsboro Boys, fight tenant evictions, and raise the alarm against
fascism. (15) Nor does it account for methodological developments such
as the New Labour History in the 1970s, the social history paradigm in
the 1980s, and the "linguistic turn" of the 1980s and 90s.
Even so, this general outline foregrounds the contemporary forces
shaping the drive to excavate the era of depression and war. These are
the terms in which historians increasingly cast their studies of the New
Deal era. Historians not only re-discovered the 1930s, they started
exploring the radical possibilities it generated and the legacies it
produced. (16) This writing reflects a considerably more tolerant
perspective on the appeal of socialism and communism to midcentury
African Americans.
Yet the 'long civil rights movement' has not swept the
field. Historians Robbie Lieberman and Clarence Lang acknowledge the
vital contribution that its practitioners have made, but take them to
task for diminishing the impact that anticommunism had on the movement.
Like Ellen Schrecker in Many Are the Crimes: McCarthyism in America
(Princeton 1998), they emphasize how anticommunism vaporized the popular
front organizations that championed a vision of facial justice
predicated on economic democracy and interracial solidarity. "It
was precisely the broader notion of black freedom," Liebermann and
Lang argue, "a global struggle for human rights encompassing
anticolonialism and economic justice that had to be downplayed in order
to achieve 'civil rights.'" (17) The civil rights
movement continued, but it was a qualitatively different phenomenon.
Gone was the idea that black equality required a thorough-going critique
of capitalism and the support of progressive labour organizations.
Visions of an international movement for racial justice embracing a
decolonizing Africa were also purged from the mainstream movement. If
sympathetic to the "long civil rights movement" thesis,
Liebermann and Lang have little patience for the suggestion that the
Cold War improved the prospects for black equality. They join Manning
Marable and a handful of others in arguing that the American rise to
globalism was anything but a blessing for the cause of black freedom.
(18)
Although Eric Porter's The Problem of the Future World: W.E.B.
Du Bois and the Race Concept at Midcentury is not an explicit
contribution to the "long civil rights movement" project, it
does illuminate a figure who became the intellectual Zelig of his era,
shaping and responding to each defining debate. Propelling Porter's
reconsideration of Du Bois in the postwar era is the historiography
which posits that the New Deal years had a decisive influence on the
impulse for social justice. Some, such as Mary Dudziak in Cold War Civil
Rights (Princeton 2000), argue that the superpower conflict had an
ironically positive impact on black civil rights. By forcing American
facial practices into the international spotlight, the Cold War
compelled decision makers to reconcile social practice and official
ideology. Others, such as Elizabeth Borgwardt in A New Deal for the
World: America's Vision for Human Rights (Cambridge 2005), contend
that the crisis of war convinced the Roosevelt and Truman
administrations to internationalize the New Deal program and the liberal
democratic ideology that supported it. Coming from the 'long civil
rights' school, others such as Nikhil Pal Singh, contend that the
anti-colonial and political economic thought of Du Bois, Robeson, and
C.L.R. James had a enduring impact on the movement that followed. (19)
Porter positions his study in the midst of this literature.
According to the author, it "enable an understanding of the deep
historical context in which Du Bois's midcentury work can be
analyzed ... bring[ing] to light shifts in mass consciousness and
ideological orientation" as well as "political and economic
developments across the globe." (13) The author may be hedging his
bets, but the Du Bois that emerges in The Problem of the Future World is
decidedly skeptical that American globalism augured a new day for people
of colour. On the eve of victory, Du Bois penned Color and Democracy, a
book that encapsulated his ambivalent response to Pax Americana. Du Bois
understood that the "new imperial order throws down the gauntlet to
the racisms of fascism and old colonialisms," writes Porter,
"but it is also predicated on a continuation of a series of racial
exclusions, precisely through its refusal to recognize the extent to
which the race concept organizes the world." (89) It is the Du Bois
of the 1940s--of the international peace and civil rights movement--that
interests Porter. In liberal historiography, he would become the civil
rights leader gone bad. Porter's focus on the radical W.E.B. Du
Bois challenges our reveries for the lyrical elegance and sagacity of
The Souls of Black Folk (1903). To his credit, his analysis also leads
us to question the judgments he made and at least some of the values he
espoused. Although Manning Marable and Gerald Home have ploughed these
fields before, Porter is convinced that their scholarship has tended
toward vindicationism. That might be understandable considering the
persistently virulent anti-communism in American society. Yet Porter
believes it is an impediment to an accurate portrait of a figure
notorious for his contradictions, not to mention lapses in judgment.
This protean period developed not only out of the clash of
ideologies and armies but out of ideas. As Porter reminds us, this was
the era of iconoclastic scholarship on race. Melville Herskovitz, Ruth
Benedict, Gunnar Myrdal, Franz Boaz, and W.E.B. Du Bois had shaken the
intellectual foundations of racial prejudice. Their research invalidated
the fixed cultural hierarchies of Victorian society and exposed the
bigotry at the center of its pseudo-scientific racial classifications.
According to Porter, those changes paradoxically promised greater
freedom and a perpetuation of racial inequality. It was "precisely
at the moment when the falsity of race was made public that its
persistence and complexity became more apparent," Porter writes.
This was because scientific advancements, state reforms, and a thriving
wartime economy had the habit of promoting black advancement while
subtly reinforcing racial subordination. (11) Making race disappear in a
paroxysm of wartime patriotism could obscure the manner in which it was
inscribed into social policy and sedimented into public consciousness.
The historical context is critical, but the theoretical questions
that Du Bois explored interest Porter the most. He raises these issues
not only to challenge contemporary cultural theorists who maintain that
race is now a pernicious category for analyzing the black experience,
but also to illuminate Du Bois's conceptual struggles in the era of
the Four Freedoms. However irrational, however artificial, Porter
argues, the objective experience of race continues to define African
American realities, particularly in a capitalist economy predicated on
racial divisions. "Thus is it easy to see that scientific
definition of race is impossible; it is easy to prove that physical
characteristics are not so inherited as to make it possible to divide
the world into races," Du Bois suggested, but that could not change
for a minute the reality that "organized groups of men by monopoly
of economic and physical power" subjugated humanity in a fashion
that preserved racial divisions and ensured continued black
subservience. (31)
More than this, race provides a platform of independent black
political activity. This was an insight that would permeate Du
Bois's postwar mentality and prodigious writings. It made him
skeptical of any movement which claimed that blacks could simply be
absorbed in a larger drive for working class solidarity. Porter's
position on Du Bois points directly to the present hand-wringing by
labour activists who imagine interracial solidarity triumphing if only
Latinos and African Americans would relinquish 'identity' and
embrace the unifying salve of class. For Du Bois, as indeed for the
Communist Party at least until the United Front, independent black
political activity was the sine qua non of working class emancipation.
From that standpoint, Porter interrogates Du Bois' meditation
on the social scientist in an era of crisis. It was the claim to
scientific authority, after all, that legitimized race in the minds of
gentlemen scholars and social uplifters. Du Bois himself was a vigorous
advocate of the idea that by exposing the irrational and antiquated
basis of social practices, the enlightened social scientist could
advance progressive reform. An entire generation of black activists,
from Du Bois to Carter G. Woodson to Charles Johnson, subscribed to this
organizing myth of the Progressive Era. Reason, particularly of the
empirical variety that informed Du Bois's The Philadelphia Negro
(1899), would banish ignorance. However, as Du Bois observed in Dusk of
Dawn (1940), the detached posture of the social scientist hardly seemed
appropriate when blacks continued to be lynched, segregated, and
discriminated against in the era of the Forgotten Man. In the tumult of
this period, Du Bois begins to accept the notion that the
"propagandist" had a legitimate role to play alongside the
"scientist." Even before drafting Dusk of Dawn, Du Bois had
come to the conclusion, according to Porter, that "science needed
to be infused with both an ethical commitment to social justice and a
fuller recognition of the lived experience of its marginalized
subjects." (39) The scholar admitted to the activism that had
characterized his work since the beginning.
Yet the debate over science and advocacy was not simply, well,
academic. It pushed him in directions far beyond the relative comfort of
the NAACP. Now the author of The Souls of Black Folk would pursue
Marxian pathways, at least in so far as they illuminated black economic
exploitation. Now the fiery editor of the Crisis would engage the
question of multiracial labour alliances, New Deal reforms, and the
political coalitions best suited to black interests.
Out of the intellectual ferment that produced Dusk of Dawn and the
journal Phylon, Du Bois generated a vision of black democratic
internationalism that guided his subsequent thought. Even as he veered
into the camp of Stalinist communism, he maintained that Africa's
destiny was tied to world peace. Now, 'Africa' as a place and
an abstract ideal would dominate his mental landscape. It had already
decisively influenced his conception of the black experience in America.
As Porter demonstrates, it was through the 1919 Pan-African Congress,
his connection to Jamaican activist Claude McKay, and his exposure to
the Marcus Garvey movement of the 1920s that Du Bois discovered the
potential inherent in combining anti-colonial activism abroad and black
protest at home. Du Bois's visits to the Soviet Union would add a
key dimension to the ideological mix. (26-27) Yet moving beyond this
broadening perspective, he came to the conclusion that the fate of
Africa could not be separated from the prospects of black liberation in
the United States. The struggle for racial equality had to be built on
anti-imperialist convictions and anti-colonial alliances. In the era of
social protest, he began to imagine the possibilities of "an
interracial and global notion of collective responsibility." (56)
Only this vision of independent racial activism could overcome the
combination of self-righteous moral uplift and flagrant colonial
subjugation that had been the plague of modern Africa.
According to Porter, this cosmopolitan vision challenged the
liberal assimilationism of Gunnar Myrdal's legendary The American
Dilemma (1944). Instead of seeing black civil rights as a method for
legitimizing the extension of American power abroad, Du Bois advocated
"a black-led reconstruction of democracy at home and abroad."
(55) In this explicitly forward-looking analysis, the author suggests
that Dusk of Dawn and Phylon prodded contemporaries to "think
carefully about the centrality of race and racism to modernity and more
specifically to the ways that they have been fundamentally intertwined
with capitalism and with the development of liberalism." (58) The
author's refreshingly direct though sometimes jarringly presentist
agenda is equally evident in the suggestion that "Du Bois's
project signals the way that an antiracist intellectual project must be
attuned to the potential racist power of both affirmations and
disaffirmations of racial difference in various aspects of social and
political life [since] they not only "mask the existence of racial
hierarchies," but they can also develop into the "ideological
mechanisms upholding white supremacy." (58) In effect, Porter is
suggesting, the Du Bois of the 1940s can be recruited in the
contemporary struggle against colourblind neoliberalism.
In subsequent chapters, Porter advances the case for Du Bois'
relevance. He details his steady disillusionment with the United Nations
as it failed to address the legacy of colonial racism. He explores his
disaffection from an NAACP increasingly devoted to the Cold War quid pro
quo of loyalty to the Truman administration in exchange for incremental
improvements. Both experiences fostered a more radical vision of postwar
reconstruction. Participating in the Phelps-Stokes Fund's study
titled The Atlantic Charter and Africa from an American Standpoint, Du
Bois would enjoin the committee to "pay more attention to the
United States' responsibility for African Affairs given its growing
investments on the continent." Criticizing the draft report, he
amplified that point, contending that it failed to "adequately
address the problems of modern imperial exploitation and histories of
the slave trade and colonialism." (109). While modifying some of
his criticisms in an article for Phylon, he would chastise the report
for failing to frame the analysis in the context of imperialism, failing
to address the need for wage protections and prohibitions on child
labour, failing to see the urgency of it all. (110) In Color and
Democracy: Colonies and Peace (1945), he articulated the
now-conventional opinion that an inequitable distribution of wealth
prevented millions of Africans from building meaningful democracies.
When compounded by the legacy of colonialism and slavery, it would leave
Africa a constant "problem." Yet that troubled continent could
not be ignored considering its central place in the logic of capitalist
expansion and in the international movement for black liberation.
Outspoken on questions of political economy, conscious of the
danger that African Americans might become complicit in the bid for
American global hegemony (173), Du Bois was driven from the liberal
civil rights movement. He landed in the ranks of the Communist-friendly
National Negro Congress and the Council of African Affairs. There, he
and Paul Robeson became the symbols of a Popular Front that had
supposedly capitulated wholesale to Soviet Communism. That supposition
is facile, Porter convincingly argues. Frustrated by American Cold War
recalcitrance, the venerable scholar-activist would espouse a
"broader, socialistic global vision of justice and
cooperation," yet one "that still imagined the United States
as a key player in the reconstruction of democracy." (130) Again
invoking the presentist possibilities inherent in Du Bois'
midcentury missives, Porter submits that Du Bois was the key figure in
situating the African predicament at the center of progressive
humanitarianism. "Du Bois suggests the need for an epistemological
and moral intervention," Porter argues, "in what [James]
Ferguson calls the 'demoralizing aspects' of neoliberal
policy, which privilege individual economic freedoms and property rights
and call upon Africans to atone for their irresponsible behaviors of the
post-independence past." (144)
In perhaps his most expressly interventionist chapter, Porter draws
analogies between Du Bois's political persecution and the
"suspect citizens" of our post-9/11 epoch. The parallels to
the present are suggestive, but what is most powerful is his
illustration of how Du Bois tried to redefine loyalty in his own era. In
short, Du Bois argued for a vision of loyalty geared to something higher
than coercive authority. Already facing prosecution for his involvement
in the Peace Information Center, which US authorities considered a
Soviet front, Du Bois penned Battle for Peace (1952), a memoir defending
his increasingly transnational sense of identity. According to Eric
Porter, Du Bois believed that his decisions were "motivated by
humanitarian instincts, democratic values typically defined as American,
and the ethical challenge that the Soviet Union poses to people who are
overly concerned with the accrual of capital and consumer goods."
(163)
Porter extols the virtues of Du Bois's cosmopolitan sense of
identity. Moved by socialism, the author argues, "and to some
extent the political project of the USSR," Du Bois distanced
himself from the claustrophobia of American politics in the 1940s and
responded to "a higher cosmopolitan calling." (166) As an
antithesis to jingoistic nationalism and belligerent unilateralism, the
cosmopolitan temperament was appealing. The dream of international
solidarity against predatory capitalism had been a feature of the Left
since the International Working People's Association and the IWW
took to the field. It was little wonder that it appealed to leftists in
an era of anxiety over atomic weaponry and postwar reconstruction.
Yet there is good reason to question Du Bois's judgment in
asserting global citizenship as the foundation of his moral authority.
Here is where Porter's presentism obscures our understanding of the
context that operated on Du Bois. Historian Henry Steele Commager
struggled with the same issues as Du Bois, if not the same
circumstances. Yet his answer was to affirm the right of dissent as a
uniquely American tradition. He asserted that "those who inflame
racial hatreds, who sow religious and class dissensions," are
genuinely disloyal. Commager was not advocating the democratic socialism
of the popular front. Even so, he and Du Bois faced a common adversary,
an anticommunist juggernaut cutting down everything in its path that was
left of center. Yet Commager's defense of the Constitution, his
criticism of southern demagogues who "make a mockery of majority
rule by the use of the filibuster," his castigation of those
"who impair democracy by denying equal educational
facilities," and his insistence that the rebellious "Seward of
the Higher Law" and the "Sumner of racial equality" would
never pass the scrutiny of HUAC gave the historian an ideological
foundation that Du Bois desperately needed. That may have not have saved
him from the recrimination of the Red Hunters. It might, however, have
provided the basis for a more effective peace movement. After all, the
abolitionists who Commager lauded--Wendell Phillips, William Lloyd
Garrison, and Henry David Thoreau--were advocates of peace, at least
until John Brown. Appealing to a larger, more cosmopolitan truth, Du
Bois was reaching for the transcendentalism, "the philosophy of the
Higher Law," which Commager placed at the "very core of
Americanism." Commager grounded his defense of independent thought
in this tradition. Loyalty was the "realization that "America
was born of revolt, flourished on dissent, became great through
experimentation." (20) In gravitating to a version of citizenship
that privileged Africa and the Soviet Union, Du Bois cut himself loose
from the indigenous traditions of American radicalism. As Commager
demonstrated, the intellectual did not have to look abroad in order to
oppose anticommunism.
If Porter (and Robin Kelley and Peggy von Eschen) overplays the
tactical virtue of Du Bois's internationalism, he captures the
scholar's sagacity in anticipating the narrowing of dissent in
postwar America. (21) He understood the danger that Cold War militarism,
authoritarianism, and unilateralism posed to the black freedom struggle.
Better than his erstwhile allies in the NAACP, he understood how Cold
War liberals would make the case that civil rights could serve "the
interests of 'national security,'" all the while
legitimizing it as a "powerful check on radical political projects
that pushed too hard for racial reform" as well "a mechanism
for scaling back the civil liberties of individuals involved in those
projects." (152) Porter is equally successful, however--not to
mention honest--in addressing Du Bois's poor judgment in adopting
the mantle of Soviet communism, particularly after the revelation of
Stalin's atrocities at the 20th Congress in 1956. It is
"surprising," writes Porter in the understatement of the book,
"given Du Bois's iconoclasm, contrariness, and still vigorous
intelligence, that he did not have more critical perspective on the
Soviet Union's manipulation of the left at this moment and did not,
like C.L.R. James, develop an analytical Marxism that was simultaneously
anti-Stalinist and critical of Western racism and imperialism."
That question might legitimately be asked of most who continued their
fealty to the party once the purge trials, gulags, and exterminations
were confirmed.
Even so, Eric Porter, following Gerald Horne, offers a plausible
answer to the dilemma. The Soviet Union, he argues, provided a
counterpoint to American imperialism and "the possibility of
socialism in practice." (152) While few historians would maintain
that the Soviet Union offered any prospect of genuine socialism after
1925, not to mention 1950, that was not the perspective of African
American radicals at the time. In the teeth of landmark court victories
for racial equality, freedom trains celebrating the American
Constitution, and the ideology of liberal internationalism, blacks
confronted the persistence of perverse racial injustice. Porter makes
the salient point that reflexive anti-Soviet hostility has become a
convenient device for discrediting a more progressive civil rights
movement, not to mention a more radical labour movement. Porter's
balance is admirable on this point. While drawn to "Marxism, his
intellectual affinity resist[ed] programmatic restrictions from the
party." The problem that Du Bois confronted was the problem that
had faced the Left since the days of Daniel DeLeon and Eugene Debs: how
to check the anti-intellectual tendencies inherent in "political
dogmatism" and manage the "political challenge of synthesizing
patriotism and cosmopolitanism." (155) The Communist Party
confronted the same dilemma. The era of Browderism and the popular front
seemed to have solved it.
Porter wants to leave us with a Du Bois who reminds us of the
"political possibilities" inherent in the "unfinished,
cosmopolitan black and left political projects of the twentieth century
for reconstructing democracy across the globe." (177) That idea--of
democracy reconstructed, reinvented, re-imagined in a global
context--pervades his analysis of Du Bois in the 1940s. Obstructed by
Porter's excessive entrenchment in the jargon of cultural studies,
it still represents his signature achievement. Yet the question we are
left with is: how? Through what instrumentality would it be achieved?
Perhaps more to the point, precisely what framework did Du Bois have to
offer an international movement? Disillusioned by the United Nations, he
turned to various aggregations of anti-colonialist intellectuals and
'peace' advocates to advance the cause. Yet these had little
purchase on a mass movement of workers and facial minorities. If the
latter-day Du Bois speaks to progressives today--and Porter would very
much like him to--it is as a principled defender of free speech and
civil liberties, not as an architect of mass movements for social
change.
The Soviet affiliation and the radical Pan-Africanism certainly
explain why liberal academics threw the older Du Bois overboard. But we
might reasonably ask why it is that Ralph Bunche, E. Franklin Frazier,
Horace Cayton, and Rayford Logan seem to have a contemporary resonance
that the later Du Bois does not. Perhaps it is because they did not
dismiss the possibility of forging a multiracial working-class alliance
in the New Deal era and using that leverage to improve the conditions
for black Americans. (37) Instead of emphasizing workers' control
over production, Du Bois endorsed black consumer cooperatives, economic
self-sufficiency, the leadership of black colleges, and a strategy of
Black Nationalism as the hope for African American liberation. At least
until 1940, Du Bois had little interest in a united labour movement.
(47) These positions seemed incongruously ill-suited to the needs of the
era. They seem even less so now.
Du Bois astutely criticized the racial limitations of New Deal
policies. Yet his investment "in complicating naive faiths in both
class struggle and state reform" and his skepticism toward
"the ameliorative capabilities of liberal state projects"
ignored how real working-class housewives, industrial labourers, and
displaced rural field hands benefitted from those programs. (33)
Admittedly, Du Bois did develop an appreciation for interracial
alliances during the war. Moreover, he did lend his support to left-led
unions in the postwar years, a development which Porter overlooks.
Despite his inability to formulate systematic alternatives, the
left-wing of the civil rights movement, rooted in organizations such as
the Highlander Folk School and the Southern Conference for Human
Welfare, embraced Du Bois. So too, for that matter, did left-wing
unionists and intellectuals. (22)
Yet if Du Bois looked favourably on left-led unions, he and other
progressive intellectuals steadily devoted less and less time to
sustaining an American movement for social reform. In the heat of the
Cold War, that proved difficult for even the most devoted rank-and-file
activists. Still, the growing preoccupation with the peace movement and
decolonization distracted him from addressing the immediate issues
facing African American workers. These included housing, full
employment, the repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act, postwar lynchings,
voting rights, a postwar Fair Employment Practices Committee,
educational opportunities, and the need for inclusion in the New Deal
social welfare apparatus. As Robbie Liebermann explains, progressives
respected Du Bois for his critique of Cold War escalation. They
applauded his objections to the rise of the national security state as
well as his belief that anticolonialism and the movement for labour and
civil rights in the United States were intricately connected. (23) Yet
too often these noble sentiments did not drill down to the immediate
social and political challenges facing urban black workers and rural
black sharecroppers. Eric Porter is most interested in how Du Bois
interpreted the African moment to American blacks. As an intellectual,
if not an activist, however, what did Du Bois offer African Americans
from their own experience? In turn, what did the African American
experience have to offer the world?
Not surprisingly, Du Bois himself provided a compelling answer. In
Black Reconstruction (1935), he assembled the evidence that African
Americans could bend the "ameliorative capabilities" of the
liberal state to their benefit. Challenging the racist historiography
that had dominated the field since the 1880s, Du Bois documented the
development of productive bi-racial alliances, grass-roots black
political activism, and effective state intervention on behalf of a
rural proletariat. As Porter acknowledges, "when Black
Reconstruction looked at African American activism, it was as much
forward looking as it was historical." (29) By serving in the Union
Army, voting for Reconstruction governments, getting elected to a wide
spectrum of public offices, attending black political conventions,
fashioning the Union Leagues, and building the state-level Republican
Party, blacks advanced southern democratization. That they did so in
alliance with the state through organizations such as the
Freedmen's Bureau was all that more remarkable.
"Reconstruction," Porter writes, "represented the
possibility of a multiracial, industrial (socialist) democracy,"
(30) an example arguably more compelling than anything the Soviet Union
or Cold War America had to offer. Intrigued by Du Bois's eloquent
reflections on Africa, Porter does not develop this line of inquiry. And
yet it was Reconstruction, not Garveyite nationalism or the
anti-colonial stirrings of the postwar period, which offered Du Bois his
most convincing example of independent black activism. It was the
recovered memory of the accomplishments of a radical Reconstruction that
Du Bois had to offer an international movement for social justice.
In fact, it was this memory of bi-racial democracy that preserved
his allegiance to the American experiment, however strained, in the
trials of anticommunism. Writing at the height of McCarthyism, he could
still claim that "I know what America has done for the poor,
oppressed and hopeless of many other peoples, and what indeed it has
done to contradict and atone for its sins against Negroes." (162)
Certainly Porter is right to contend that the Du Bois of the 1940s
remains relevant because his analysis reminds us to be conscious of
"shifts in the ontology of race while simultaneously looking out
for the return of older racial logics." Yet perhaps more important
was what Du Bois understood about the American experience. The conflict
over access to land and the control of labour in the postwar South was
the central drama in 19th century America, notwithstanding the war
itself. Du Bois understood that it was the culmination of a movement to
"reconstruct democracy in America," as the historian subtitled
his groundbreaking analysis. Focusing intensively on Africa and its
place in the escalating Cold War, Du Bois lost sight of what this vision
of a mass movement for economic democracy could mean to the black
freedom struggle. The UN Security Council, not to mention the American
national security state, had little to offer the movement for racial
emancipation. Absent a black labour left (there were more blacks in the
CIO than the NAACP), Henry Wallace, and the Progressive Party challenge,
we have good reason to question whether the Truman administration would
have struck a presidential commission on civil rights and desegregated
the armed forces. What Black Reconstruction offered was the example of
African-American political self-determination essential to the 1940s
struggle. Distortions of historical memory all but obscured those
achievements.
In Wrestling with the Left, Barbara Foley directly engages the
question of historical memory. In this case, thought, it is to challenge
an African American author made famous by his selective recollection of
the Popular Front. Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man was published in
1952 to critical acclaim. It won him a National Book Award as well as
accolades from liberal commentators who interpreted the novel as an
allegory on the treachery of the Communist Party toward blacks and, by
extension, toward American society. In the conventional account, Ellison
was a fellow traveler, possibly a member of the party until 1945. He
joined the ranks of other disillusioned writers, most notably Richard
Wright and Chester Himes, and threw off the alleged shackles of
communist perfidy in the black freedom struggle. (24) Since its
publication, critics have praised Invisible Man as the saga of that
journey, in which black Americans yearning for freedom repudiate
radicalism and nationalism for the benefits of liberal pluralism. In
another sense, Invisible Man has become the 20th century literary
equivalent of St. Augustine's conversion, in which the writer
awakens from the illusions of vulgar Marxism to the truth of
de-politicized, art-for-art's sake. As Foley demonstrates, however,
Ellison's vast collection of unpublished short stories, notes,
out-takes, and earlier drafts tell a different story. In the era of the
Cold War, one wonders whether the publication of such material would
have altered the reception of Invisible Man at all. As Foley
acknowledges, the book "is read as testimony to Ellison's
maturation; the novel's repudiation of leftists authoritarianism
and scientism and its embrace of democratic pluralism and
epistemological ambivalence exhibit not just its protagonist's
development from ranter to writer, but the increasing sophistication of
the text's creator as well." (5)
In a challenging but richly rewarding analysis of Ellison's
oeuvre, Foley contests that interpretation. At the same time, she
identifies the literary and ideological traces of Ellison's radical
convictions that remained in Invisible Man despite his mainstreaming
edits. Not unlike Michael Denning's The Cultural Front: The
Laboring of American Culture in the Twentieth Century (1997), influenced
in turn by Foley's earlier and seminal Radical Representations:
Politics and Form in LIS Proletarian Fiction, 1929-1941 (1993),
Wrestling with the Left is meant to demonstrate that the United Front
ethos of the 1930s continued to mould the sensibilities of writers who
had apparently cut their ties to the movement. Instead of interpreting
the novel from the perspective of the anticommunist consensus that
Ellison embraced, Foley examines it from the perspective of a writer
trying to make sense of a world in which the range of political options
had yet to be irrevocably narrowed. Foley sees the novel "as a
conflicted and contradictory text bearing multiple traces of his
struggle to repress and then abolish the ghost of his leftist
consciousness and conscience." (7)
The evidence that Foley accrues illustrates the depth of the
author's belief in the possibility of a class-conscious,
multiracial movement for social change. The most remarkable feature of
Wrestling with the Left is the mountain of passages demonstrating the
author's ethic of radical democratic engagement that end up on the
cutting room floor as he reconciles the novel to the culture of
conformity. In the fervid atmosphere of the 1930s, Ellison was clearly
developing a perspective that combines historical materialism and racial
internationalism. Following his stint in Harlem as a chronicler of the
black experience for the Works Progress Administration, Ellison turns to
radical journalism. Exploring his contributions to The New Masses and
the left-wing Negro Quarterly, Foley discovers a writer who subscribed
to the "cardinal principles of Popular Front-era CP politics."
(33) These included the party's commitment to black
self-determination in the South, its vision of itself as the inheritors
of the abolitionist tradition, and its emphasis on the insidious threat
of fascism at home and abroad. More intriguing, his affinity for the
CPUSA convinced him to accept its notorious twists and turns in policy,
an ideological alignment to which his sanitized recollections do not
admit. If Ellison had his fictional "Brotherhood"--his
literary substitute for the Communist Party --selling out Harlem blacks
and then inciting riots, his earlier journalism evinced a
class-conscious writer who reluctantly acquiesced to the shifting winds
of party policy. Ellison's assent to party discipline even included
its subordination of the racial struggle to the imperative of winning
the war. (39)
Similar to W.E.B. Du Bois, the aspiring author underlines the vital
importance of black political leadership in any movement for liberation.
Yet in 1943, in an editorial following the Zoot Suit riots, Ellison is
still extolling the virtues of "class-based interracial
alliances." (48) In an unpublished editorial for Negro Quarterly,
he contends that the authentic cultural independence will be won when
black leaders become "theoretical Marxists, emotionally Negro
nationalists, Negro in form, socialist in content, working class in
politics." (50) Paul Robeson becomes Ellison's example of the
cosmopolitan black activist. Above all, he was committed above all to
the elimination of social injustice, not to the pursuit of the main
chance, which seems to preoccupy the hucksters and hipsters in the final
version of Invisible Man. On the concept of race, Ellison warned of its
mystical allure. "We must not be fooled by race; that is a myth ...
The real problem is class: class: class: whether hidden behind theories
of race superiority or beneath the chronic nationalism of fascism."
(52) Like many of his CP contemporaries, and unlike Du Bois, Ellison
underestimated the existential reality of race and its utility as an
organizing principle. What he and the literary left did not do was
ignore the political and economic forces that conditioned both the
experience of race and the paths to black liberation.
Yet long before his absorption into the Cold War consensus, Ellison
had grown skeptical of the party. In Foley's hands, he emerges an
independent leftist intellectual, not a party hack. The war years saw
Ellison moving toward a "critique of the CP's economistic
narrowing of the domain of the antiracist struggle," not a
wholesale repudiation of Marxism or even the party. The condemnation of
Stalinist authoritarianism would only come later. Influenced by literary
theorist Kenneth Burke, Ellison would incorporate a narrative strategy
based on the Marxian dialectic even while his character repudiated the
idea of "history as a spiral." Using other Marxian techniques,
he would begin crafting a novel that illustrated his "enduring
fascination with the figure of the African American leftist as
Promethean rebel." (110) Ellison's story of the young
southerner schooled in but ultimately betrayed by the ethic of
Washingtonian submission, raised to political consciousness but
manipulated by the Harlem Brotherhood, and ultimately emancipated by
"affirming the principle" of American democratic pluralism
(328) represents a struggle between "doubt and commitment."
Yet it is also an account of the author's own intellectual tension.
This struggle was not between leftist naturalism and apolitical
modernism, but "to find a ground where his warring tendencies might
coexist in dialectical tension." (111)
Out of this dialectic, Ellison produced a book that initially
reflected his Popular Front convictions. Its early drafts exhibited his
immersion in political economy and his jaundiced view of the American
past. In chapters subsequently excised from the final draft, he
critiqued the complicity of the black college in the Jim Crow system,
making allusions to Robert R. Moton, Booker T. Washington's
right-hand man at Tuskegee. It was Moton who turned over a Sharecroppers
Union organizer, wounded in gun battle with local deputies, to the
authorities instead of offering him the protection of the college. His
penultimate versions underlined northern culpability in the failure of
Reconstruction. They emphasized the importance of black-white alliances
anchored in left-wing trade unionism. They critiqued hyper-patriotism,
extolled antifascism, acknowledged the positive impact of communist
activism in Harlem, celebrated the idea that progressive social activism
generated human dignity, castigated the illusion of the American Dream.
In an earlier draft of the Harlem boarding house scenes, Ellison
inserted the character of Leroy, a member of a fictionalized version of
the National Maritime Union. Leroy becomes the "proletarian
hero" of Invisible Man, and his membership in the parallel NMU no
accident. Ellison admired the commitment of the radical maritime union
to the cause of the Scottsboro Boys and the defense of Angelo Herndon.
He grafts their class consciousness, working-class militancy, and
international racial solidarity onto Leroy. Killed by company thugs, his
body tossed callously overboard, Leroy enacts the mythic sacrifice of
the fictional John Henry and the historical John Brown in the cause of
black liberation.
Yet the character of Leroy haunts the narrator. He inhabits his
former room at the boarding house in Harlem. Through his extant journal
and the impression he has branded on the memory of the remaining
boarders, Leroy becomes the model for his dedication to a world more
humane. In the original, the invisible man's dedication plays out
in the arena scene where he delivers an impassioned speech before a
captive audience shortly after becoming a Brotherhood organizer. In this
pivotal moment, the invisible man is transformed by his recognition of
the link between individual fulfillment and collective purpose. Brother
Jack, the cadre leader who, in the final text, would come to symbolize
the myopic mendacity of the party, is anything but an authoritarian
stooge. In the arena scene, the invisible man originally has the measure
of himself and his comrades in a larger movement of social purpose:
"I no longer lived upon a fragment," Foley quotes the novel,
"but in a total world, the revolution of which, with its surge of
events, through the correct and combined action of others, I could
control. For the first rime I seemed to have a hand in my own destiny.
Old Norton [the white philanthropist patterned after a George Foster
Peabody type, paternalistically investing in Washingtonian black
subservience] had spoken of me as his destiny, now Brother Jack was
giving me a sense that I was my own--no, that we, here in the arena were
our destiny. We had only to combine to act." (261) Brotherhood, it
seemed to the unreconstructed Ellison, not acquisitive individualism,
was the path to a fuller humanity. (349) In the 1952 publication, the
scene would serve to illustrate the clash between communistic dogmatism
and the African American desire for dignity. Although excised from the
final draft, this section, Foley argues, keenly illustrates the Popular
Front sensibilities that originally animated the novel.
Foley's analysis extends well beyond this episode; in fact,
two thirds of the book is devoted to a chapter-by-chapter analysis that
details Ellison's descent into hackneyed anticommunist stereotypes.
One of the most provocative features of Wrestling with the Left is the
author's analysis of Ellison's historical distortions, which
end up attributing the Harlem riot of 1943 to Communist Party intrigue.
By "stripping the wartime Harlem uprising of its historical and
political context," Ellison is able to create archetypes that
"reinforce negative generalizations about how leftists
characteristically act and think." (318-9) Through exhaustive
analysis of the archival material, Foley makes the convincing argument
that the author's eventual posture of liberal anticommunism
transformed the Invisible Man into "a far less humane and
antiracist novel that it might otherwise have been." (23) Instead
of the "images of fraternity and activism so badly needed to help
them confront the crying issues of the rimes," Ellison offered, in
the tendentious epilogue, a reaffirmation of the status quo.
Foley's Wrestling with the Left, a work of literary history,
is at the crossroads of scholarship reinterpreting the struggle for
black equality and the literature of the left. Beginning with Daniel
Aaron and Writers on the Left (1961), a book that reinforced many of the
negative presuppositions about the proletarian literature of the 1930s,
this effort has matured considerably. The polemical attacks in the style
of Irving Howe and Louis Coser have diminished, at least in the
consideration of popular front literature. It has given way to a more
sophisticated though left-inflected genre. (25) For example, William J.
Maxwell also
illuminates the left-wing influences in Ellison's early
writings. He dismisses the idea that his Negro Quarterly ruminations
were the product of his nascent literary modernism. Yet Maxwell takes
Foley to task in her earlier essays for asserting too dramatic a rupture
between his communist and liberal phases. According to Maxwell,
"Invisible Man's many meditations on existential and
historical time, for their part, tell a different story of relationship,
continuing dialogue on vanguardism and belatedness whose outlines were
revealed as Ellison bolted from the scene of Scottsboro [and] emigrated
to Harlem communism." (26)
If Foley has decisively recovered the ethic of progressive humanism
purged from Invisible Man, she is reluctant to consider Ellison's
legitimate grievances with the Communist Party. Cliches, historical
misrepresentations, and literary elisions aside for a moment, Invisible
Man might be read as the culmination of Ellison's struggle to
imagine a black freedom movement more authentically democratic than the
one he encountered in Harlem. Even if that struggle failed, as Foley
argues, the "images of fraternity and activism so badly
needed" come at the cost of minimizing CPUSA centralization,
opportunism, and plain bad behaviour. Foley prudently wants to avoid the
anti-communist labels of "dogmatism" and "Stalinism"
that permit historians to dismiss a movement rather than analyze it. In
their "reductiveness, they answer the question of causality before
it is asked." (18) The author also correctly points out that,
despite internal divisions and external repression, the party continued
to oppose "police brutality, segregated housing, employment
discrimination, and resurgent southern violence." (20) Yet since
Foley, like Porter, invites us to consider the contemporary relevance of
her work--"the invisible man's original plan for expanding his
own and others' humanity ... continues to require out serious
consideration"--it is reasonable to ask whether no-strike pledges
and patriotic national unity resembled "socialism in one
country" to African Americans. It is equally pertinent to ask if it
echoed Booker T. Washington's counsels of patience and submission.
That brand of political expediency was the source of disillusionment for
many an American communist, black and white. (27) Its contemporary
echoes are in a mainstream labour movement that too often considers
racial issue an impediment to class solidarity.
Historian Ellen Schrecker has provided a convincing solution to the
dilemma that Foley confronted, namely, the dual character of the party.
She examined the "complicated and contradictory nature of a
political movement that was both subservient to the Kremlin and
genuinely dedicated to a wide range of social reforms, a movement whose
adherents sometimes toed the party line and sometimes did not even
receive them." (28) Foley is certainly cognizant of this dichotomy.
Even if we accept Schrecker's description, the party was never as
monolithically "rigid" at the local level as critics would
have it. (29) Yet had Foley pursued Schrecker's line of inquiry
further, she may have deepened her elucidation of why Ellison, "who
took his left politics, as a source of both radical and existential
joy" (17), wrote such a "conflicted and contradictory
text." (7) This is not to invite a replay of Cold War
recriminations and polarities. Instead, it is to encourage what J.R.
Uhlmann has described as the effort to "embed the party story in
the life and culture of the United States." (30) Ellison was
wrestling not only with his leftist convictions, as Foley contends; he
was also trying to find a place for black leadership and
self-determination. Like Du Bois, he was struggling to interpret
radicalism in an American context.
What was additionally frustrating to black progressives was that,
during the Third Period, the Communist Party did insist on the necessity
of black leadership in any legitimate working-class movement. This was a
case that Harlem Renaissance writer Claude McKay convincingly made to
the Fourth World Congress of the Comintern in 1922. (31) Paul Robeson
understood that as well. As Robin Kelley writes, the incomparable
Robeson understood that "black self-determination was not simply a
matter of guaranteeing democratic rights or removing the barriers to
black political and economic power, nor was it a matter of creating a
[black] nation ... It was about promoting and supporting an independent
black radical movement that could lead the way to a revitalized
international working-class assault on racial capitalism." (32) It
was a conviction, Kelley argues, which Richard Wright, C.L.R. James, and
Claude McKay understood as well. Foley's analysis suggests that the
young Ellison would have agreed. If "suitably updated to encompass
the historical conditions and political landscape of the twenty-first
century" (349), Foley's provocative analysis might indeed
contribute to a regeneration of the idea that 'becoming more
human' requires cooperative action, collective resolve, class
solidarity. It might require something more promising that is, than
Ellison's conciliatory injunction, that "America is woven of
many strands; I would recognize them and let it so remain." (33)
Wrestling with the Left demonstrates that Ellison was grappling
with issues that have troubled working-class activists since the Eight
Hour Movement in 1886. How, for example, do labour movements reconcile
American sensibilities to the demand for class or racial unity? How do
they tap into traditions of American dissent, establish effective
political organizations, without descending into demagoguery and
dictatorship? What vision of an alternative America is powerful enough
to draw on existing traditions of cooperative action and defuse the
rhetoric of acquisitive individualism? African American activists have
posed similar questions since abolitionists debated whether the American
Constitution should be redeemed or immolated as a slaveholder's
bill of lading. As Eric Porter understands, W.E.B. Du Bois asked the
very same questions. How do blacks achieve political self-determination
while building a countervailing force against racialized capitalism?
Wrestling with the Left demonstrates that Ellison was asking those
questions. His answer was to adopt the liberal consensus view that
popular protest was inimical to American liberal individualism. That
answer did little to resolve the issues that nettled him enough to write
Invisible Man.
Both The Problem of the Future World and Wrestling with the Left
seek to restore the 1940s as a period of lost opportunities and roads
not taken toward a more humane and democratic America. That project is
an indispensable corrective to the version of civil rights crusade that
prevails in popular culture today. (34) Yet however electrifying
additional salvage missions into the history of the "long civil
rights movement" might prove, they should not obscure the
devastating effectiveness of the campaigns to discredit, disrupt, and
destroy it. Echoes of the popular front era were certainly evident in
the labour-oriented vision of racial equality that Martin Luther King
championed in the 1960s. No sensible historian should try to diminish
the courage and genuine accomplishments of that movement. Yet lacking
the institutional network, economic clout, and unifying social
democratic ideology of the popular front era, its gains were necessarily
limited. It could not hope to reform the substructure of economic
inequality. It could not claim a united, bi-racial, working-class front
located in trade unionism and on the political economy of urban decline.
It could not eradicate the exclusions written into national policy by
the New Deal itself, let alone corporate America. In an era of global
integration, when black, white, and Hispanic workers face so many of the
same adversities, a new version of social movement unionism promises a
challenge to the primacy of capital. The era of the older Du Bois and
the younger Ellison continues to offer the most promising possibilities.
(1.) Inspired, of course, by Langston Hughes' elegiac
"Let America Be America Again" (1938). The author wishes to
thank W. Fitzhugh Brundage for his comments on and suggestions for this
essay.
(2.) Of course, the literature is monumental. Some of the most
influential of the early period include August Meier and Elliot Rudwick,
CORE: A Study in the Civil Rights Movement, 1942-1968 (New York 1973),
Clayborne Carson, In Struggle: SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960s
(Cambridge 1981), and Robert Weisbrot, Freedom Bound: A History of
America's Civil Rights Movement (New York 1990).
(3.) Manning Marable, Series Editors' Foreword, Anticommunism
and the African American Freedom Movement: Another Side of the Story,
ed. Robbie Lieberman and Clarence Lang (New York 2009), ix-x.
(4.) Wilson Jeremiah Moses, The Golden Age of Black Nationalism,
1850-1925 (New York 1988).
(5.) Robert Korstad, "Civil Rights Unionism and the Black
Freedom Struggle," American Communist History 7 (2008): 255;
Michael Dennis, Luther P. Jackson and a Life for Civil Rights
(Gainesville 2004), 4-5.
(6.) Peter B. Levy, The New Left and Labor in the 1960s (Champaign
1994; Kevin Boyle, The UAW and the Heyday of American Liberalism,
1945-1968 (Ithaca 1995); Nancy MacLean, "Achieving the Promise of
the Civil Rights Act: Herbert Hill and the NAACP's Fight for Jobs
and Justice," Labor 3 (Summer 2006): 13-19.
(7.) Marable, Series Editors' Foreword, ix.
(8.) As Charles Eagles pointed out, many of the early histories
were written by former participants. Eagles suggests that this personal
and ideological investment produced a "sympathetic attitude toward
the quest for civil rights" that prevented historians from
developing "thorough, critical, and radical interpretations of the
civil rights struggle." See "Toward New Histories of the Civil
Rights Era," Journal of Southern History 66 (November 2000):
816-17.
(9.) Eric Arnesen, "Reconsidering the Long Civil Rights
Movement," Historically Speaking 10 (April 2009): 32.
(10.) Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, "The Long Civil Rights Movement and
the Political Uses of the Past," Journal of American History 91
(March 2005), 1246.
(11.) Hall, "The Long Civil Rights Movement," 1251-53.
(12.) Robbie Lieberman and Clarence Lang, "Introduction,"
Anticommunism and the African American Freedom Movement (Basingstoke
2009), 3.
(13.) Hall's article makes this case, but a fuller development
of the notion that social democratic and even socialist values underlay
the movement of the 1950s and 60s can be found in Thomas F. Jackson,
From Civil Rights to Human Rights: Martin Luther King Jr., and the
Struggle for Economic Justice (Philadelphia 2007).
(14.) Not to mention Harvard Sitkoff's The Struggle for Black
Equality, 1954-1992 (New York 1981 [reprint 1993]), which elaborated the
political and demographic antecedents of the movement, which he confined
to the post-1954 period.
(15.) Mark Naison, Communists in Harlem During the Depression (New
York 1983); Naison's work was part of a larger revisionist
renaissance on American communism, but particularly notable works on the
relationship between the party and African Americans include Robin D.G.
Kelley, Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Great Depression
(Chapel Hill 1990), and Mark Solomon, The Cry Was Unity: Communists and
African Americans, 1917-1936 (Jackson, MS 1998).
(16.) Some leading examples include Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore,
Defying Dixie: The Radical Roots of Civil Rights, 1919-1950 (New York
2008); Adam Fairclough, Race and Democracy: the Civil Rights Struggle in
Louisiana, 1915-1972 (Athens 1999), which emphasizes the long-view as
well as NAACP local activism but not the popular front; Robert Rogers
Korstad, Civil Rights Unionism: Tobacco Workers and the Struggle for
Democracy in the Mid-Twentieth Century South (Chapel Hill 2003), which
introduced the idea of "civil rights unionism"; Patricia
Sullivan, Days of Hope: Race and Democracy in the New Deal Era (Chapel
Hill 1996), Rosemary Feurer, Radical Unionism in the Midwest, 1900-1950
(Urbana and Chicago 2006), Martha Biondi, To Stand and Fight: The
Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City (Cambridge 2006),
Thomas Sugrue, Sweet Land of Liberty: The Forgotten Struggle for Civil
Rights in the North (New York 2008).
(17.) Lieberman and Lang, "Introduction," 6.
(18.) Manning Marable, Race, Reform, and Rebellion: The Second
Reconstruction in Black America, 1945-1990, 2nd edition (Jackson 1991),
13-39.
(19.) Nikhil Pal Singh, Black is a Country: Race and the Unfinished
Struggle for Democracy (Cambridge 2004).
(20.) Henry Steele Commager, "Who is Loyal to America?"
Harper's Magazine 195 (September 1947): 193-99, quotes on 197-98.
(21.) Peggy von Eschen, Race Against Empire: Black Americans and
Anticolonialism, 1937-1957 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997),
which argues that the 1940s saw the development of international black
united front dedicated to fundamental social change, African
independence, and global citizenship based on racial solidarity.
(22.) Gerald Home, Black and Red: W.E.B. Du Bois and the
Afro-American Response to the Cold War, 1944-1963 (Albany 1986), 235,
243.
(23.) Robbie Liebermann, "Another Side of the Story: African
American Intellectuals Speak Out for Peace and Freedom during the Early
Cold War Years," in Anticommunism and the African American Freedom
Movement, 23.
(24.) Add to Ellison and Wright's critique that of Harold
Cruse, who excoriated white communists in anti-Semitic terms, accusing
them of arrogating "the mantle of spokesmanship on Negro affairs,
thus burying the Negro radical potential deeper and deeper in the slough
of white intellectual paternalism": The Crisis of the Negro
Intellectual: A Historical Analysis of the Failure of Black Leadership
(New York 1967), 147.
(25.) For example, Alan Wald, Writing from the Left: New Essays on
Radical Culture and Politics (London 1990); ibid., Trinity of Passion:
The Literary Left and the Antifascist Crusade (Chapel Hill 2007), Cary
Nelson, Revolutionary Memory: Recovering the Poetry of the American Left
(New York 2001), William J. Maxwell, New Negro, Old Left:
African-American Writing and Communism Between the Wars (New York 1999),
as well as Denning's The Cultural Front and Foley's Radical
Representations. Typical of Daniel Aaron's appraisal of left
literature was his observation that in the 1930s, "'social
consciousness' became for some revolutionary enthusiasts a
legitimate reason to abnegate literary responsibilities"; Writers
on the Left: Episodes in American Literary Communism (New York:
Harcourt, Brace, and World, 1961 [1992]), 10. Yet Aaron also
acknowledged the idealistic motives that moved gifted writers such as
John Dos Passos to join the party and the John Reed Clubs. See Michael
Kazin, "The Agony and Romance of the American Left," American
Historical Review 100 (December 1995): 1493. There is certainly no
unanimity on the virtues of proletarian literature. For a recent, almost
categorical dismissal of proletarian fiction as an exercise in literary
mediocrity and mechanistic propaganda, see Morris Dickstein, Dancing in
the Dark: A Cultural History of the Great Depression (New York 2009),
chapter 4.
(26.) William J. Maxwell, "Creative and Cultural Lag: The
Radical Education of Ralph Ellison," in A Historical Guide to Ralph
Ellison, ed. Steven C. Tracy (New York 2004), 79.
(27.) Eric Arnesen makes the point that many practitioners of the
Long Civil Rights movement
thesis downplay A. Philip Randolph's consistent opposition to
facial inequality throughout the war, which included leadership of the
famed Match on Washington movement. "Reconsidering the Long Civil
Rights Movement," 33.
(28.) Ellen Schrecker, Many Are the Crimes, McCarthyism in America
(Princeton 1998), xv.
(29.) This is an argument which historian Randi Storch has made in
Red Chicago: American Communism at its Grassroots, 1928-1935 (Urbana and
Chicago 2007.)
(30.) J.R. Uhlmann, "Moving On--Towards a Post-Cold War
Historiography of American Communism," American Communist History 8
(2009): 24.
(31.) Robin D.G. Kelley, Freedom Dreams: The Black Radical
Imagination (Boston 2002), 54.
(32.) Ibid., 54.
(33.) Ralph Ellison, Invisible Man (New York 1952), 435.
(34.) Hall, "The Long Civil Rights Movement," 1237-9.
Michael Dennis, "Let America Be America Then: Imagining a More
United Front in the Early Civil Rights Era," Labour/Le Travail, 68
(Fall 2011), 151-172.