home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1830>
- <title>
- June 07, 1993: Philosopher With a Mission
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 07, 1993 The Incredible Shrinking President
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 60
- Philosopher With a Mission
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With his new, hot-selling book on race, CORNEL WEST could become
- the most important black intellectual of the 1990s
- </p>
- <p>By JACK E. WHITE/OAKLAND
- </p>
- <p> With his full-blown Afro, close-fitting three-piece suits and
- fondness for rap music, Cornel West comes across as too hip
- to be a philosopher. That helps explain why people are always
- confusing him with someone considerably less highbrow, especially
- when he's not on campus:
- </p>
- <p>-- Driving through upstate New York to lecture at a New England
- college a few years ago, West was pulled over by a cop who figured
- him for a drug runner because of his flashy clothes, jewelry
- and sporty Camaro. When West protested that he was in fact a
- professor of religion, the officer scoffed, "Yeah, and I'm the
- flying nun. Let's go, nigger," and hauled him off to jail. It
- took a phone call to the college to secure West's release.
- </p>
- <p>-- As a teaching fellow at Harvard, West was preparing to give
- a talk on the Greek tragedy Antigone when one of the students,
- mistaking West for a janitor, asked him to bring in more chairs.
- West complied, but when the rest of the class arrived he marched
- to the lectern. He delivered an impassioned discourse on Antigone's
- love song "about human beings being so noble on one hand and
- so cruel on the other."
- </p>
- <p>-- After watching West coax amen after amen from the hard-to-please
- congregation of the Allen Temple Baptist Church in Oakland,
- California, with a fiery sermon, many people are convinced he's
- an ordained minister. Observed theologian William Sloane Coffin,
- who witnessed it: "That was black preaching at its best." The
- truth, says West, is that although he accepted Christ as his
- personal Saviour when he was 14, "I've just never felt the call
- to preach. I don't proselytize for anybody, including Jesus."
- </p>
- <p> As these incidents suggest, Cornel West is one complex dude:
- brilliant scholar, political activist, committed Christian and
- soul brother down to the bone. At 40 he has become one of the
- most insightful and passionate analysts of America's racial
- dilemma to emerge in recent years, the architect of a post-civil
- rights philosophy of black liberation that is beginning to be
- heard across the country. "I think he is one of our most important
- critical thinkers," says James H. Cone, West's former colleague
- at New York's Union Theological Seminary. "He has almost singlehandedly
- helped us see the importance of economic and class issues within
- the black community and the larger society." Henry Louis Gates
- Jr., head of Harvard's black-studies program, calls West "the
- pre-eminent African-American intellectual of our time."
- </p>
- <p> West is a study in the dialectics of personality: an author
- of acclaimed books on American pragmatism, prophetic Christianity
- and the ethical dimensions of Marxism who also possesses an
- encyclopedic knowledge of the latest releases from Arrested
- Development and Janet Jackson. He turned down a coveted post
- at Harvard in part because Boston radio stations don't play
- enough black music, which he calls "an important restorative
- of my soul." He was kicked out of elementary school in Sacramento,
- California, for slugging a teacher who asked him to recite the
- Pledge of Allegiance, which West refused to do as a protest
- against segregation. But he went on to graduate magna cum laude
- from Harvard in only three years, while simultaneously working
- two jobs and earning a reputation as one of the most bodacious
- dancers ever to do the funky chicken on an Ivy League campus.
- Says his brother Clifton: "Cornel has always liked to go to
- two or three parties every weekend, but only after reading two
- or three books. He's been like that since he was a kid."
- </p>
- <p> As director of Afro-American studies at Princeton since 1988,
- West has nurtured what even its rivals concede is the best
- program of its kind in the nation. Significantly, the university,
- where West got his doctorate, is within broadcast range of New
- York City's WBLS-FM, West's favorite soul-music station. The
- department includes Pulitzer-prizewinning novelist Toni Morrison
- and biographer Arnold Rampersad.
- </p>
- <p> Now this academic star with a firsthand knowledge of the tribulations
- of being black in America is on the brink of wider fame. He
- has become a high-profile guest on TV talk shows and a controversial
- contributor to op-ed pages and magazines, with bristling articles
- on black anti-Semitism, gay rights and the social virtues of
- rap. His new book, Race Matters, has shown up on some best-seller
- lists on the strength of an 18-city promotion tour.
- </p>
- <p> Timed to appear on the first anniversary of the Los Angeles
- riots, Race Matters is the first of West's eight books (including
- Breaking Bread, Insurgent Black Intellectual Life, co-authored
- by the black feminist writer bell hooks) intended for a general
- audience. Though far from his most profound writing, the slender
- collection of essays is laden with provocative observations
- on a broad range of racially loaded topics that have delighted
- and irritated people on both sides of the color line. West flays
- liberals and conservatives for trying to force blacks "to do
- all the `cultural' and `moral' work necessary for healthy race
- relations" while ignoring the psychic pain that racism has inflicted
- on the urban poor. He accuses the black middle class that has
- sprung up since the civil rights movement of the '60s of being
- "decadent" and "deficient." One consequence of its grasping
- materialism, he charges, is that "there has not been a time
- in the history of black people in this country when the quantity
- of politicians and intellectuals was so great, yet the quality
- of both groups has been so low." West also ventures into psychosexual
- waters, writing that "it is virtually impossible to talk candidly
- about race without talking about sex." He contends that "Americans
- are obsessed with sex and fearful of black sexuality," adding
- that "black sexuality is a taboo subject in America principally
- because it is a form of black power over which whites have no
- control."
- </p>
- <p> West's interests range far beyond the epistemological conundrums
- that preoccupy many professional philosophers. Nor is he easy
- to typecast as a liberal or conservative, black nationalist
- or integrationist, since he endorses bits and pieces of all
- those ideas. Instead, this self-styled "intellectual freedom
- fighter" wields his learning as a polemical sword, slashing
- at barriers that prevent "ordinary people from living lives
- of dignity." Says West: "We need intellectual weaponry to find
- out why people, black and white, are catching the hell they're
- catching in America and around the world. If we don't have it,
- and historical windows open up to make social change, we'll
- find ourselves unprepared." His goal is to become an "organic
- intellectual" on the order of Ralph Waldo Emerson, the father
- of transcendentalism, "someone who tries to fuse the life of
- the mind with the public affairs of the nation, who tries to
- shape public opinion."
- </p>
- <p> West's vision, which he calls prophetic pragmatism, is most
- fully spelled out in The American Evasion of Philosophy. The
- book traces how Emerson's emphasis on innovation, refined by
- John Dewey and other American thinkers, then leavened with a
- dose of Marxist class analysis and the black church's commitment
- to racial justice, can be the basis for a rebirth of democratic
- radicalism. Says West: "I'm trying to revive a grand yet flawed
- tradition, to take the best from liberalism, populism and the
- Gospel while keeping track of what happens to everyday people,
- the ones the Bible calls the least of these."
- </p>
- <p> In practice, that makes West a Marxist who believes in God,
- an admirer of black nationalism who thinks such Afrocentrics
- as Leonard Jeffries are too narrowly parochial. He pulls the
- disparate threads together like jazz: "Emerson said it's all
- about experimentalism, and Louis Armstrong's music is all about
- improvisation. I think we need these kinds of links, to be eclectic,
- to open us up to what we actually share rather than what divides
- us."
- </p>
- <p> Like many black activists and socialists, West rails against
- white racism, powerful corporations and rampant consumerism.
- But because of his passion for moral consistency, he also insists
- the fight against sexism and homophobia must be on an equal
- footing with the battle against racial oppression. "A lot of
- black brothers and sisters think talking about homophobia and
- sexism will dilute the attack on racism," says West. "But black
- culture is unimaginable without James Baldwin, the poet Audre
- Lorde or ((civil rights activist)) Bayard Rustin, and I won't
- even begin to talk about black gay brothers and sisters and
- the role they play in the music of the black church." As for
- sexism, says West, "for too long, black brothers have been beating
- up black sisters just like white policemen beat up Rodney King.
- We've got to clean up the moral content of the black freedom
- struggle."
- </p>
- <p> West's budding fame presents him with new challenges. The biggest
- is to avoid being swept up in a destructive swirl of publicity
- as many earlier black intellectuals and leaders have been. Starting
- with Booker T. Washington, America has seemed to have room for
- only one top black spokesman at a time, consigning each former
- favorite to the ash heap of inauthenticity as soon as a new
- H.N.I.C. (Head Negro in Charge) appeared.
- </p>
- <p> With West, this process of celebrity making is shifting into
- high gear. The message on West's answering machine at Princeton
- refers those interested in arranging a speaking engagement to
- a high-powered New York booking agency. Along with Michael Lerner,
- editor of the liberal Jewish magazine Tikkun, he received a
- $100,000 advance for a joint book on black-Jewish tensions,
- an almost unheard-of sum for a scholarly work.
- </p>
- <p> Pressure is building on West to provide instant answers to every
- racial question, whether he has thought it through or not. For
- example, after a talk at a bookstore in Berkeley, California,
- he was confronted by Cherie Chichester-Glass, a veteran elementary
- school teacher. "I've read your book and listened to you talk,"
- said the teacher. "Hell, how do we put this into practice in
- the classroom?" West replied with a rambling soliloquy about
- the need to set priorities and then call on the experts to fill
- in the details. His response left Chichester-Glass exasperated.
- "I think he's a man of prophetic strengths," she said, "but
- it's also obvious he's never set foot in an elementary school
- classroom."
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, despite the freshness of his diagnosis of social problems,
- West's prescriptions for curing them can be vague and hopelessly
- Utopian. He advocates a "politics of conversion" in which blacks
- and other oppressed people would "affirm themselves as human
- beings, no longer viewing their bodies, minds and souls through
- white lenses and believing themselves capable of taking control
- of their own destinies." That would translate into a new surge
- of grass-roots activism, the building of coalitions between
- now competing groups, and "large-scale public intervention to
- ensure access to basic social goods." In other words, critics
- charge, reconstituting the 1960s.
- </p>
- <p> Some friends fear the hoopla will prove impossible for West
- to resist. "You've got to understand one thing about Cornel,"
- says a colleague. "There's a part of him that wants to be the
- next H.N.I.C. It's not just white folks holding him up." Says
- Cone: "One of the best ways to destroy someone is to expose
- and promote him. It's very hard to be critical of a system that
- makes a hero out of you."
- </p>
- <p> West admits he shares his friends' misgivings. ``The same folks
- who want you to be a public intellectual also want you to be
- an expert, a visionary, a technician and leader on the ground
- all at the same time. You can't do all those things and do them
- well," he says. "People will try to shape you into an image
- of yourself that in no way coincides with your image of yourself.
- It's a danger that might be realized, even though I'm fighting
- against it as hard as I can."
- </p>
- <p> The time could come, West says, when he will withdraw from the
- public stage back into the ivory tower to think through the
- practical implications of his ideas, while sustaining himself
- with books, the black church and sweet soul music. Meanwhile,
- friends say, West has read biographies of the great public intellectuals
- of the past--Emerson, Thomas Carlyle, Walt Whitman, Matthew
- Arnold--to prepare for the highly visible role that is being
- thrust upon him, not entirely against his will. After all, if
- a philosopher like West can't be philosophical about success,
- who can be?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-