Take a photo of a barcode or cover
163 reviews for:
Black against Empire: The History and Politics of the Black Panther Party
Joshua Bloom
163 reviews for:
Black against Empire: The History and Politics of the Black Panther Party
Joshua Bloom
so thorough and also i think i read it over too long a time bc i forgot many things and like i remember lots of details but not lots of main timeline points… maybe i needed a timeline to reference throughout. but yeah very good and also very cool to recognize so many places in oakland/berkeley. definitely going to return to it but maybe chapter by chapter.
informative
inspiring
tense
slow-paced
informative
sad
tense
medium-paced
Incredible. So very sad that the US was effective at breaking the Panthers up by pitting them against each other. Their mobilization and empowerment of their community is inspiring and what we should all aspire to.
Notable:
33 “how can the racist US government talk about ‘freeing’ anyone when the US government practices racism against Black Americans every day?”
Notable:
33 “how can the racist US government talk about ‘freeing’ anyone when the US government practices racism against Black Americans every day?”
“… if we begin to depend on the power of money, on the power structure and money - we also then become tyrants, dictators, or Tonton Macoutes as is the case in Haiti. And this is why one must destroy all the capitalist structures which create monsters, be they White, Black, or Yellow.” 317
“… the best care package that we could send to other liberation struggles around the world is the work we do at home.” 318
informative
inspiring
reflective
dark
emotional
informative
inspiring
sad
tense
medium-paced
Riveting and highly detailed. This book transformed my view of the BPPSD and "radical Black dignity" (or, you know, treating Black people as equal citizens who are not required to endure unjust and inhumane treatment). Highly recommend.
informative
challenging
informative
reflective
slow-paced
When I saw this title on the library bookshelf, it gave me pause. What did I really know about the Black Panthers really?
In grade school we learned about lynching, segregation, the Civil Rights Movement, the Montgomery Bus Boycott & Rosa Parks, Freedom Riders, Brown v. Board of Education, Martin Luther King, Jr., and then suddenly all that energy seemed to peter out, or at least was never mentioned again. I think we learned about Malcolm X and SNCC for half a second but burgeoning Black Power and Black nationalism didn’t get as much play as non-violence, integration, and assimilation.
Then there were the older (white) men in my family who spoke of Black Power and the Panthers disparagingly, the same way they did of ‘Women’s Lib’ and draft dodgers, so I had to assume the Panthers were righteous folks.
But other than that, I knew nothing.
This text was a much needed correction to the deficit in my knowledge. Focusing on the political history of the Panthers, the authors demonstrate how they were able to channel unrest, frustration, and anger into a compelling political and social program that served as the zeitgeist for a few short years, uniting anti-imperialists, anti-racists, and anti-war activists as well as moderate people throughout the United States.
It was deeply disturbing to read about how in some ways little has changed (ghettoization, police brutality) while other times I laughed aloud at how much had changed (the FBI illegally wiretapped Panther phones—ha! Today the NSA routinely illegally monitors our communications).
The authors don’t shy away from the negative aspects of the Panthers by in some regards do down play them: how armed self-defense attracted certain types people who didn’t work well within a hierarchy, less-than-revolutionary gender roles, Eldridge Cleaver admitting being a rapist in Soul on Ice, or how businesses were harassed into donating food for the free breakfast program, for example.
Overall, I found this volume to be illuminating and informative, full of excerpts from primary documents that helped explain the origins, ideology, and actions of the Black Panther Party.
In grade school we learned about lynching, segregation, the Civil Rights Movement, the Montgomery Bus Boycott & Rosa Parks, Freedom Riders, Brown v. Board of Education, Martin Luther King, Jr., and then suddenly all that energy seemed to peter out, or at least was never mentioned again. I think we learned about Malcolm X and SNCC for half a second but burgeoning Black Power and Black nationalism didn’t get as much play as non-violence, integration, and assimilation.
Then there were the older (white) men in my family who spoke of Black Power and the Panthers disparagingly, the same way they did of ‘Women’s Lib’ and draft dodgers, so I had to assume the Panthers were righteous folks.
But other than that, I knew nothing.
This text was a much needed correction to the deficit in my knowledge. Focusing on the political history of the Panthers, the authors demonstrate how they were able to channel unrest, frustration, and anger into a compelling political and social program that served as the zeitgeist for a few short years, uniting anti-imperialists, anti-racists, and anti-war activists as well as moderate people throughout the United States.
It was deeply disturbing to read about how in some ways little has changed (ghettoization, police brutality) while other times I laughed aloud at how much had changed (the FBI illegally wiretapped Panther phones—ha! Today the NSA routinely illegally monitors our communications).
The authors don’t shy away from the negative aspects of the Panthers by in some regards do down play them: how armed self-defense attracted certain types people who didn’t work well within a hierarchy, less-than-revolutionary gender roles, Eldridge Cleaver admitting being a rapist in Soul on Ice, or how businesses were harassed into donating food for the free breakfast program, for example.
Overall, I found this volume to be illuminating and informative, full of excerpts from primary documents that helped explain the origins, ideology, and actions of the Black Panther Party.
informative
reflective
medium-paced