I rarely write reviews, but this book deserves one.
Given it has been more than half a century since it's writing, it is amazing to me how timeless ideas are. Also, as unfortunate as it is, how long a gap there is between ideas and progress. The book also highlights the sheer number of individuals who contribute to progress versus the simplistic hero-worship that is conventional history.
It is absolutely impossible to summarize this tome, so I will share some anecdotes that particularly resonated with me (in no particular order), and the timeless ideas that stuck with me.
- This line from the author - “Historians and history books are historical….. They bind time and express time and their times… “
- I thought the passing of batons and the "binding of time" across historians from different times was a very cool concept
- A timeless idea that unfortunately persists. Slavery existed before European slave trade. Africans enslaved Africans and they just happened to now sell them to the Europeans.
- While that did happen, it was far from the norm, and actively discouraged. Quote from a letter the King of the Congo state sent to European royalty - “we need priests and people to teach in schools, and wine and flour for the holy sacrament…. beg of you to help stop the trade in slaves or markets for slave”
- The idea of connections across powerless groups
- Whether it was Frederick Douglas and his connections between womens’ suffrage and Black rights or MLK and his connections across Poor people irrespective of race, the concept of allyship is a timeless one
- Harriet Tubman - everything about her is incredible
- Tons of data about lack of social mobility existed in 1963 and the Civil Rights argument was incredibly data-backed. It is amazing to me, that these ideas which have been proven for so long, still need to be re-proven
- While there has been tremendous progress in Black contributions to Sports, Politics, Entertainment, Religion, I learned a lot about how Black America has been blocked out of business
- Black-owned banks and how they have reduced over the years
- In 1900, there were 200 Black-owned hospitals, in 2000, there were 3
- In 1900, 15M acres of farmland was controlled by African Americans, in 2000 that was down to 3M acres
- The broad number of intellectuals who built the scaffolding that Martin Luther King helped erect.
This book really talked about the broader intellectual history versus talking about one individual