Cornel West — "Black people have been treated like property, like things, like commodities. And…"
Black people have been treated like property, like things, like commodities. And we've still got to love.
Black people have been treated like property, like things, like commodities. And we've still got to love.
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"We are living in an age of spiritual blackout, where the lights of truth, beauty, and goodness are being extinguished."
"I'm a bluesman in the life of the mind, a jazzman in the world of ideas."
"I have nothing against rich brothers and sisters. Pray for 'em every day. But callousness and indifference, greed and avarice is something that's shot through all of us."
"The true measure of a society is how it treats its most vulnerable."
"I'm a public intellectual, but I'm also a street intellectual. I'm rooted in the streets, in the hood, with the people."
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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