Cornel West — "To be a Christian is to be an underdog, a subversive, a revolutionary, a trouble…"
To be a Christian is to be an underdog, a subversive, a revolutionary, a troublemaker.
To be a Christian is to be an underdog, a subversive, a revolutionary, a troublemaker.
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"To be radical is to grasp things by the root."
"I'm a human being. I'm a child of God. I'm a brother to all."
"I'm a revolutionary Christian, a non-Marxist socialist, a prophetic pragmatist, and a Socratic gadfly."
"The blues is not about sadness, it's about courage. It's about resilience. It's about hope in the face of despair."
"The greatest challenge of our time is to keep despair at bay."
American philosopher, public intellectual, and theologian (Race Matters, 1993; Democracy Matters, 2004), now teaching at Union Theological Seminary. Closely associated with Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Harvard Black-studies collaborator) and Toni Morrison (literary peer and friend). For an intellectual contrast, see Larry Summers, economist and former Harvard President — Summers's 2002 confrontation with West over rap-album recordings, summer-school grading, and political activism led to West's high-profile departure from Harvard for Princeton. The clash became the public face of competing visions of Black scholarship — celebrity public intellectual vs traditional academic gatekeeping.
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