Fifty Years Later: Robert Penn Warren’s Who Speaks for the Negro?

IF 0.7 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Oral History Review Pub Date : 2015-09-01 DOI:10.1093/ohr/ohv060
Benji de la Piedra
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Abstract

Fifty years ago, in May 1965, Random House published Robert Penn Warren’s Who Speaks for the Negro? The book was the culmination of Warren’s effort “to find out something, first hand, about the people, some of them anyway, who are making the Negro Revolution what it is—one of the dramatic events of the American story” (xxxiii). Throughout 1964, Warren traveled South and North, tape recorder in hand, to converse with black leaders, students, and artists engaged in the revolution. Then he wrote a book that documented his process of interviewing these individuals, of studying the revolution’s various political and philosophical thrusts. Who Speaks for the Negro? sounds like an anachronistic title, which is part of what makes this volume so important. Reading it on the subway I’ve found myself minding the book’s bold, eye-catching cover. People don’t say “Negro” today. Nor do we ever recall the civil rights movement as a “Negro Revolution.” But back when African Americans called themselves Negroes, Robert Penn Warren was one of their sharpest white allies. Who Speaks for the Negro? is therefore a precious artifact of America’s recent past. It is a snapshot of certain ways in which people intelligently advocated against white supremacy and legalized segregation in 1964, before certain customs, laws, and words changed. In this book, we find Warren synthesizing a series of intricately related debates over the nature and future of black American experience. It should be read as an important reference volume in American history, a document that can help guide our activism today and in the future. We who believe that black lives matter can never lose sight of Negro memories.
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五十年后:罗伯特·佩恩·沃伦的《谁为黑人说话?》
50年前,1965年5月,兰登书屋出版了罗伯特·佩恩·沃伦的《谁为黑人说话?》这本书是沃伦努力的高潮,“第一手地了解人们,至少是他们中的一些人,他们使黑人革命成为美国故事中的戏剧性事件之一”(xxxiii)。在整个1964年,沃伦手持录音机,前往南方和北方,与参与革命的黑人领袖,学生和艺术家交谈。然后,他写了一本书,记录了他采访这些人的过程,记录了他研究革命的各种政治和哲学问题的过程。谁为黑人说话?听起来像是一个不合时宜的标题,这也是这本书如此重要的原因之一。在地铁上读这本书时,我发现自己很在意这本书醒目的封面。今天人们不再说"黑人"了。我们也永远不会把民权运动称为“黑人革命”。但当非裔美国人称自己为黑人时,罗伯特·佩恩·沃伦是他们最坚定的白人盟友之一。谁为黑人说话?因此是美国近代历史的珍贵文物。这是1964年,在某些习俗、法律和词汇发生变化之前,人们明智地倡导反对白人至上主义和使种族隔离合法化的某些方式的缩影。在这本书中,我们发现沃伦综合了一系列关于美国黑人经历的本质和未来的错综复杂的争论。它应该被视为美国历史上重要的参考书,可以帮助指导我们今天和未来的行动主义。我们这些相信黑人的生命也是重要的人,永远不能忘记黑人的记忆。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
27.30%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: The Oral History Review, published by the Oral History Association, is the U.S. journal of record for the theory and practice of oral history and related fields. The journal’s primary mission is to explore the nature and significance of oral history and advance understanding of the field among scholars, educators, practitioners, and the general public. The Review publishes narrative and analytical articles and reviews, in print and multimedia formats, that present and use oral history in unique and significant ways and that contribute to the understanding of the nature of oral history and memory. It seeks previously unpublished works that demonstrate high-quality research and that offer new insight into oral history practice, methodology, theory, and pedagogy. Work published in the journal arises from many fields and disciplines, reflecting the interdisciplinary nature of oral history. While based in the U.S., the Review reflects the international scope of the field and encourages work from international authors and about international topics.
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