> Details
Baldwin, Bridgette
[Contributor];
Bush, Rod
[Other];
Baldwin, Davarian L
[Contributor];
Barber, David
[Contributor];
Morgan, Edward P
[Contributor];
Lazerow, Jama
[Contributor];
Campbell, James T
[Contributor];
Ogbar, Jeffrey O. G
[Contributor];
Wilson, Joel
[Contributor];
Lazerow, Jama
[Editor];
Self, Robert O
[Contributor];
Bush, Rod
[Contributor];
Payne, Roz
[Contributor];
Self, Robert O.
[Other];
Lake, Tim
[Contributor];
Williams, Yohuru
[Editor];
Williams, Yohuru
[Contributor]
In Search of the Black Panther Party
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- Media type: E-Book
- Title: In Search of the Black Panther Party : New Perspectives on a Revolutionary Movement
- Contributor: Baldwin, Bridgette [Contributor]; Bush, Rod [Other]; Baldwin, Davarian L [Contributor]; Barber, David [Contributor]; Morgan, Edward P [Contributor]; Lazerow, Jama [Contributor]; Campbell, James T [Contributor]; Ogbar, Jeffrey O. G [Contributor]; Wilson, Joel [Contributor]; Lazerow, Jama [Editor]; Self, Robert O [Contributor]; Bush, Rod [Contributor]; Payne, Roz [Contributor]; Self, Robert O. [Other]; Lake, Tim [Contributor]; Williams, Yohuru [Editor]; Williams, Yohuru [Contributor]
-
Published:
Durham: Duke University Press, [2006]
[Online-Ausgabe]
- Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (408 p)
- Language: English
- DOI: 10.1515/9780822388326
- ISBN: 9780822388326
- Identifier:
- Keywords: African Americans Civil rights History 20th century ; African Americans Politics and government 20th century ; Civil rights movements United States History 20th century ; Radicalism United States History 20th century ; Revolutionaries United States History 20th century ; POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory
- Type of reproduction: [Online-Ausgabe]
- Origination:
-
Footnote:
In English
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web
-
Description:
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Editors' Note -- Introduction: The Black Panthers and Historical Scholarship: Why Now? -- PART ONE. The Panthers through the Historian's Lens -- The Black Panther Party and the Long Civil Rights Era -- PART TWO. The Panthers as American Revolutionaries -- Introductory Comment: The Panthers and the Question of Violence -- In the Shadow of the Gun: The Black Panther Party, the Ninth Amendment, and Discourses of Self-Defense -- PART THREE. From the Bottom Up and the Top Down: Personal Politics and the Black Panthers -- Introductory Comment: The Panthers and Local History -- ''A Rebel All His Life'': The Unexpected Story of Frank ''Parky'' Grace -- WACing Off: Gossip, Sex, Race, and Politics in the World of FBI Special Case Agent William A. Cohendet -- PART FOUR. Coalition Politics: The Panthers as a ''Revolutionary Vanguard'' -- Introductory Comment: White Tigers, Brown Berets, Black Panthers, Oh My! -- Invisible Cages: Racialized Politics and the Alliance between the Panthers and the Peace and Freedom Party -- Leading the Vanguard: White New Leftists School the Panthers on Black Revolution -- Brown Power to Brown People: Radical Ethnic Nationalism, the Black Panthers, and Latino Radicalism, 1967-1973 -- PART FIVE. Revolutionary Politics: The Black Panthers in the American Imagination -- Introductory Comment: ''Culture Is a Weapon in Our Struggle for Liberation'': The Black Panther Party and the Cultural Politics of Decolonization -- The Arm(ing) of the Vanguard, Signify(ing), and Performing the Revolution: The Black Panther Party and Pedagogical Strategies for Interpreting a Revolutionary Life -- Media Culture and the Public Memory of the Black Panther Party -- Contributors -- Index
Controversy swirled around the Black Panthers from the moment the revolutionary black nationalist Party was founded in Oakland, California, in 1966. Since that time, the group that J. Edgar Hoover called "the single greatest threat to the nation's internal security" has been celebrated and denigrated, deified and vilified. Rarely, though, has it received the sort of nuanced analysis offered in this rich interdisciplinary collection. Historians, along with scholars in the fields of political science, English, sociology, and criminal justice, examine the Panthers and their present-day legacy with regard to revolutionary violence, radical ideology, urban politics, popular culture, and the media. The essays consider the Panthers as distinctly American revolutionaries, as the products of specific local conditions, and as parts of other movements of the late 1960s and early 1970s.One contributor evaluates the legal basis of the Panthers' revolutionary struggle, explaining how they utilized and critiqued the language of the Constitution. Others explore the roles of individuals, looking at a one-time Panther imprisoned for a murder he did not commit and an FBI agent who monitored the activities of the Panthers' Oakland branch. Contributors assess the Panthers' relations with Students for a Democratic Society, the Young Lords, the Brown Berets, and the Peace and Freedom Party. They discuss the Party's use of revolutionary aesthetics, and they show how the Panthers manipulated and were manipulated by the media. Illuminating some of the complexities involved in placing the Panthers in historical context, this collection demonstrates that the scholarly search for the Black Panthers has only just begun.Contributors. Bridgette Baldwin, Davarian L. Baldwin, David Barber, Rod Bush, James T. Campbell, Tim Lake, Jama Lazerow, Edward P. Morgan, Jeffrey O. G. Ogbar, Roz Payne, Robert O. Self, Yohuru Williams, Joel Wilson - Access State: Restricted Access | Information to licenced electronic resources of the SLUB