In this penetrating critical analysis of Louis Farrakhan's ascent to national influence, Robert Singh argues that the minister's rise to prominence is a function of race and reaction in contemporary America. Singh probes the origins and significance of Farrakhan in American politics.
Drawing on published and unpublished records, personal interviews, and Farrakhan's writings and speeches, Singh places Farrakhan expressly within the "paranoid style" of such reactionaries as Jesse Helms and Joseph McCarthy. Examining Farrakhan's biographical details, religious beliefs, political strategies, and relative influence, Singh argues that Farrakhan is an extreme conservative who exploits both black-white divisions and conflicts within the black community for personal advancement.
Singh proposes that Farrakhan's complex appeal to African-Americans is based on his ability to orchestrate the diffuse forces of African-American protest against the status quo. Paradoxically, says Singh, Farrakhan has achieved his position in part by positioning himself against most African-American political leaders, a tactic made possible by the extent to which black American politics now displays the same basic features as American politics in general. By stoking the fires of fear and hatred yet effecting no real changes, Farrakhan poses a greater threat to black Americans than to whites.
The Farrakhan Phenomenon is written in a clear, accessible style that will appeal to general readers concerned about race relations as well as to scholars of American history and politics. It reveals a shrewd opportunist who has capitalized on America's continuing failure to deal with its serious and abiding race problems.
Reviews
"Singh has written an exciting and balanced account of Farrakhan's career and place in American racial politics. [He] correctly places Farrakhan on the right side of the American political spectrum . . . . In telling the Farrakhan story, Singh does a first-rate job of relating Farrakhan's move from the margins of American racial politics to the center."—Clarence E. Walker, professor of history, University of California-Davis
"Singh addresses an important topic in modern American politics . . . . He has produced an exceptionally well researched and argued analysis of the politics of the Farrakhan movement. In doing so, he not only makes a significant contribution to the study of African-American politics but provides a timely account of the ideological foundations of U.S. political debate. This is a valuable book."—Desmond King, St. John's College, Oxford, and author of Separate and Unequal: Black Americans and the U.S. Federal Government
"Singh has drawn a fascinating social miniature of Louis Farrakhan and his Nation of Islam, and connected it up to an enduring perspective on American political history, courtesy of Richard Hofstadter and the paranoid style."—Byron E. Shafer, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of American Government, Nuffield College, Oxford
About the Author
Robert Singh is a lecturer in political science at the University of Edinburgh.