April
10, 2008 - Issue 272 |
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Crisis
of the Negro Intellectual Revisited Worrill’s World By Dr. Conrad W. Worrill BlackCommentator.com Columnist |
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One of our great ancestors, Harold Cruse wrote a book, The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual: A Historical Analysis of the Failure of Black Leadership (New York Review Books Classics) which was published in 1967, at the height of the Black Power Movement. This insightful book stirred up a spirited conversation in the African Liberation Movement. That conversation revolves around the weaknesses of our movement, the direction of our movement, and inability of some of the leaders and thinkers of our movement to understand what Brother Cruse calls “The Great American Ideal.” This problem continues to linger with us today. Brother Cruse spent most of his activist
and organizing days in This year, 2008 marks the forty-first year of the publication of The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual. Its importance to our movement has still not received the attention it deserves, primarily because Brother Cruse was so honest in his criticisms of our movement and many of its well-known leaders. Therefore, the book was blocked in many circles from receiving the kind of legitimacy its substance deserved. However, a small group of scholar/activists have discussed and debated Brother Cruse’s ideas during this thirty-nine year period and have organized study groups from time to time that have aided in understanding the ideas that Cruse presents in his book. When we use the term intellectual, we are talking about people who struggle around ideas - writers, poets, scholars, researchers, teachers, students, and activists. Intellectuals are people who grapple with ideas and who function in the cultural, political, educational, and economic domains of the society. As Dr. Anderson Thompson always says, “Ideas are weapons of war.” With this definition, let us review briefly some of the ideas and concepts that Brother Cruse presented in The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual. One of the major points Cruse makes is that African American intellectuals are pathological in their approach to the choices available to them. It is Cruse’s observation that they appear to adopt the values of the dominant group, which he describes as the white Anglo Saxon Protestant. It was in the first chapter of The
Crisis of the Negro Intellectual that Cruse raised this question
of the problem of identity of the African in Cruse illustrated this in his book
when he described the following: “In 1940, as one of my first acts in
the pursuit of becoming a more social being, I joined a YMCA amateur
drama group in Cruse continued on this point. “I wondered why and very naively expressed my sentiments about it. The replies I received clearly indicated these amateur actors were not very favorable to the play about Negro life, although they would not plainly say so. Despite the fact that this question of identity was first presented to me within the context of the program of a small, insignificant amateur drama group, its implications ranged far beyond.” Another problem Cruse addresses is
that the African in From the point of view of Brother
Cruse, the African in For Brother Cruse, the crisis was
whether the African in BlackCommentator.com columnist Conrad W. Worrill, PhD, is the National Chairman of the National Black United Front (NBUF). Click here to contact Dr. Worrill.
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