Kevern Verney
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Malcolm X and black power, 1960–1980
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This chapter examines the extensive, wide-ranging, developments in the historiography on black power and black nationalism since the publication of the first edition of The debate on black civil rights in America in 2006. The growth and development of the Nation of Islam (NOI), or Black Muslim movement, is assessed together with its impact on African American communities in the inner cities of the north. Recent works on Elijah Muhammad, the leader or ‘Messenger’ of the Nation, are considered, together with the role of women in the organization and the reasons for their conversion to it, notwithstanding the paternalistic outlook of the NOI. The historiography on the life and career of Malcolm X, the Nation’s best-known national spokesperson, is examined, together with the reasons for his departure from the NOI and his enduring significance as a race leader some sixty years after his assassination in 1965. The growth of the black power movement in the late 1960s, its successes and failures, and the reasons for its rapid decline by the early 1970s, are considered. Particular attention is given to the proliferation of recent studies on the grassroots achievements of the Black Panthers, challenging earlier negative portrayals. The life and career of Stokely Carmichael, arguably the most influential advocate for black power, is discussed, as well as scholarly debates on the historical roots of armed self-defence and the extent to which black power should be seen as a continuation of, or departure from, the values of the mainstream civil rights movement.

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