“A challenging, original, and exacting intellectual, Martin Kilson was also a generous, supportive teacher and mentor. His unforgettable voice permeates this memoir, which re-creates the world as he found it and then transformed it. The field of African and African American Studies owes a profound debt to his unyielding demand for scholarly rigor and also to his faith in its centrality to higher education.” - Henry Louis Gates Jr. “As the first African American tenured professor at Harvard, Martin Kilson, marked a symbolic milestone in American higher education as part of a founding generation of Black professors in prestigious white institutions. This status makes him into a figure of historic import, so that how he saw himself becomes not just one man's story, but an indexical way of thinking about one's place in American life in a particular time and place. Intensely personal, <i>A Black Intellectual's Odyssey</i> is an important intellectual text.” - Nell Irvin Painter, Edwards Professor of American History Emerita, Princeton University "Kilson’s <i>Odyssey</i> heightens the contradictions involved in what it means to be successful and Black in America. Indeed, it compels us to ask what success means in the context of a capitalist white supremacist heteronormative society." - Joshua L. Crutchfield (Black Perspectives)
He gives a sweeping sociological tour of Ambler as a multiethnic, working-class company town while sketching the social, economic, and racial elements that marked everyday life. From narrating the area's history of persistent racism and the racial politics in the integrated schools to describing the Black church's role in buttressing the town's small Black community, Kilson vividly renders his experience of northern small-town life during the 1930s and 1940s.
At Lincoln University, Kilson's liberal political views coalesced as he became active in the local NAACP chapter. While at Lincoln and during his graduate work at Harvard, Kilson observed how class, political, and racial dynamics influenced his peers' political engagement, diverse career paths, and relationships with white people. As a young professor, Kilson made a point of assisting Harvard's African American students in adapting to life at a white institution.
Throughout his career, Kilson engaged in pioneering scholarship while mentoring countless students. A Black Intellectual's Odyssey features contributions from three of his students: a foreword by Cornel West and an afterword by Stefano Harney and Fred Moten.
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xv
1. Growing Up in a Northern Black Community, 1930s–1940s 1
2. A Helping-Hand Ethos and Black Social Life, 1920s–1960s 12
3. Melting-Pot-Friendly Schools in My Hometown, 1920s–1960s 29
4. Black Youth and Social Mobility, 1920s–1960s 40
5. Ambler: A Twentieth-Century Company Town 58
6. Lincoln University, 1949–1953, Part I 77
7. Lincoln University, 1949–1953, Part II 96
8. Harvard: Graduate School and Teaching 119
9. Maturation: Research and Scholarship 134
Epilogue. The Election of Barack Obama 148
Afterword. Notes on Professor Martin Luther Kilson's Work / Stefano Harney and Fred Moten 161
Selected List of Martin Kilson's Writings 173
Notes 177
Bibliography 187
Index 191
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Martin Kilson (1931–2019) was Frank G. Thomson Professor of Government Emeritus at Harvard University. He wrote and edited several books, including Transformation of the African American Intelligentsia, 1880–2012, which won the 2015 American Book Award. He was a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a Guggenheim Fellow, a member of the National Council on the Humanities, and a longtime member of the editorial board of Dissent.Cornel West is Dietrich Bonhoeffer Professor at Union Theological Seminary.
Stefano Harney and Fred Moten are two of Martin Kilson’s many students. They are authors of The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study and All Incomplete.