Up From Slavery:: Autobiography of Booker T. Washington
📄 Viewing lite version
Full site ›
4.95
USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸
Book Details
Author(s)Booker T. Washington,
ISBN / ASIN1453699090
ISBN-139781453699096
Sales Rank905,123
CategoryBiography & Autobiography
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
Nineteenth-century African American businessman, activist, and educator Booker Taliaferro Washington's Up from Slavery is one of the greatest American autobiographies ever written. Its mantras of black economic empowerment, land ownership, and self-help inspired generations of black leaders, including Marcus Garvey, Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm X, and Louis Farrakhan. In rags-to-riches fashion, Washington recounts his ascendance from early life as a mulatto slave in Virginia to a 34-year term as president of the influential, agriculturally based Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. From that position, Washington reigned as the most important leader of his people, with slogans like "cast down your buckets," which emphasized vocational merit rather than the academic and political excellence championed by his contemporary rival W.E.B. Du Bois. Though many considered him too accommodating to segregationists, Washington, as he said in his historic "Atlanta Compromise" speech of 1895, believed that "political agitation alone would not save [the Negro]," and that "property, industry, skill, intelligence, and character" would prove necessary to black Americans' success. The potency of his philosophies are alive today in the nationalist and conservative camps that compose the complex quilt of black American society.
More Books in Biography & Autobiography
Asylum Denied: A Refugee’s Struggle for Safety in Amer…
View
Billie Holiday: The Musician and the Myth
View
The Cat Who Came Back for Christmas: How a Cat Brought…
View
Marrying Roque: Memoir of an Interracial Marriage
View
The Orbital Perspective: Lessons in Seeing the Big Pic…
View
All We Know: Three Lives
View
Why Did Freud Reject God?: A Psychodynamic Interpretat…
View
Skirting Heresy: The Life and Times of Margery Kempe
View