I rate this book highly.
This book comes out of an America where moral instruction (with Christian specificity) and formal systems of learning are very much inextricable from each other. Mr. Woodson navigates moral and formal learning in early America in a vital way — and gives us an understanding of what education (and Education) meant in early America.
Education, moral or otherwise, for black folks in America gets obstructed, walked back and rescinded explicitly to conserve a racist society (shocking...I know) — importantly, actors on these backslides can, at the same time, be critically aware doing so undermines a universally shared (or specifically Christian) system of values.
Under such conditions, Moral Character becomes anemic and devalued; and in its absence, racialized hierarchy becomes long lived. Yikes. Fucking ruinous. We’ll leave it at that.
So too, Mr. Woodson points us to noble and stalwart educators; to surveys, petitions, and letters; to ordinances, codes, and legislature; to single-rooms, campuses, and districts; and to the bright flashes of many of the best efforts to create a place of learning, instruction and experience for folks of color in our country.
This is what is important about studying work like Mr. Woodson’s. It is possible to see (lower-case ‘l’) liberal education as a fundamentally [though not exclusively] moral thing. And it is possible to spend a life working to that end. And to see, again and again, a nickel’s worth of good when you’ve brought a dollars’ worth of value to society. The book reviewed here, in some important ways, follows that dollar.
Mr. Woodson’s work bares needful witness.