Toronto Star

Ta-Nehisi Coates thinks about race so you don’t have to

The more radical the writer’s critique of America, the more tightly America embraces him

- CARLOS LOZADA Carlos Lozada is associate editor and nonfiction book critic for The Washington Post.

In early 2014, before Ferguson, before Eric Garner, Tamir Rice and Walter Scott, before Emanuel AME Church, Ta-Nehisi Coates got caught up in a skirmish over who should be deemed America’s “foremost public intellectu­al.” Coates nominated MSNBC’s Melissa Harris-Perry; Politico’s Dylan Byers dissented. Rapid-fire posts were exchanged, accusation­s of racism and anti-intellectu­alism traded. As Twitter wars go, it was a Grenada.

The episode is worth recalling now only because, in the year and a half since, Coates has won that title for himself, and it isn’t close. In an America consumed by debates over racism, police violence and domestic terror, it is Coates to whom so many turn to affirm, challenge or, more often, to mould our views from the clay. “Among public intellectu­als in the U.S.,” writes media critic Jay Rosen, “he’s the man now.” When the Confederat­e battle flag on the statehouse grounds in Columbia, S.C., seemed the only thing the news media could discuss, the Washington Post’s Ishaan Tharoor put it simply: “Just shut up and read @tanehisico­ates.” These days, you hear many variations on that advice.

Coates is more than the writer whose thinking and focus best match the moment. With his 2014 Atlantic cover essay on “The Case for Reparation­s,” which explores the brutal U.S. history of redlining (the practice of denying services or funding to specific neighbourh­oods based on their racial or ethnic makeup) and housing discrimina­tion, and now with the critical rapture surroundin­g his new book, Between

the World and Me, he has become liberal America’s conscience on race. “Did you read the latest Ta-Nehisi Coates piece?” is shorthand for “Have you absorbed and shared the latest and best and correct thinking on racism, white privilege, institutio­nal violence and structural inequality?” If you don’t have the time or inclinatio­n or experience to figure it out yourself, you outsource it to Ta-Nehisi Coates.

The structure of Coates’s new book speaks to this role. Between the World and

Me is written as a letter to the author’s teenage son, conveying the personal and historical struggle to “live free in this black body,” a body that faces the constant, exhausting threat of state-sanctioned violence. But the book also reads like an open letter to white America, to the well-meaning sorts who at some point might have said, “Yes, things are bad, but they’re getting better, right?” It is to them that Coates is delivering this stern, fatherly talk. And the audience is rapt. “Between the

World and Me is, in important ways, a book written toward white Americans, and I say this as one of them,” writes Slate critic Jack Hamilton. “White Americans may need to read this book more urgently and carefully than anyone.”

In one of the earliest assessment­s, New Yorker editor David Remnick described the book as “extraordin­ary” and likened Coates to James Baldwin. Reviewers have hailed it as “a classic of our time” (Publishers Weekly), “something to behold” (The Washington Post), “a love letter written in a moral emergency” (Slate) and “precisely the document this country needs right now” (the New Republic). New York Times film critic A.O . Scott went as far as one could go, calling Coates’s writing “es-sential, like water or air."

What does such veneration — especially from a news media that Coates has attacked as indifferen­t to black America or inclined to view black America as a criminal justice problem — mean for Coates’s arguments about the enduring influence of white supremacy? Does the praise disprove him, or to the contrary, does it only suggest that, in an age when liberal elites

“Never forget that we were enslaved in this country longer than we have been free.” AUTHOR TA-NEHISI COATES

line up to lament their white privilege, the structures of inequality are resilient enough to accommodat­e, even glorify, this most radical critic? In his 2009 memoir, The Beautiful Strug

gle, Coates tells the story of his childhood in West Baltimore and his relationsh­ip with his father, “Conscious Man,” a librarian and ex-Black Panther, publisher of obscure black texts, father of seven children by four women, but a man who “never shirked when his bill came due.” He sought to instill consciousn­ess in the young Ta-Nehisi, awareness of a community’s historical struggle.

The son absorbed the lessons, listening to Malcolm X’s The Ballot or the Bullet on his Walkman, becoming “a plague” on his father’s books. “My Consciousn­ess grew, until I was obsessed with having been birthed in the wrong year,” Coates wrote in the earlier memoir. “All the great wars had been fought, and I was left to rummage through the myths of my fathers.”

Coates has found his new wars, mainly by realizing that the old ones never really went away. And Between the World and Me seeks to impart that consciousn­ess not just to his son but to all of us: that the violence done to black Americans is not accidental but by design, “the product of democratic will”; that white America’s dream of nice houses, good schools and Memorial Day cookouts is built on centuries of plunder of African-American bodies, through lynching and redlining, bullets and chokeholds; and that “sentimenta­l firsts” — the first black this or that — are little consolatio­n. “Never forget that we were enslaved in this country longer than we have been free,” he writes.

The more radical Coates’s critique of America, the more tightly America embraces him. Those who posit any shortcomin­gs in Coates’s analysis — as when Buzzfeed’s Shani O. Hilton argued that in his worldview, “the black male experience is still used as a stand-in for the black experience” — do so almost lovingly. Even conservati­ve critics, such as National Review’s Kevin D. Williamson, spend nearly as much time praising Coates as tackling his argu- ments, or like Shelby Steele in an embarrassi­ng appearance on ABC’s This Week, they seem to capitulate even before the battle has been joined.

“Our media vocabulary is full of hot takes, big ideas, takeaways, grand theories of everything,” Coates writes in his latest book. “But some time ago I rejected magic in all its forms.” His followers have not. If racism is America’s oldest sin, reading Coates has become its newest absolution.

Benjamin Wallace-Wells of New York magazine concludes that Coates is that rare radical writer who “radicalize­s the Establishm­ent.” But if so, how lasting might that radicaliza­tion prove, and to what effect? The acclaim for “The Case for Reparation­s” came not just despite the unlikeliho­od of any reparation­s actually coming to pass; as with many causes, its very improbabil­ity may have made it especially easy to embrace.

All consciousn­ess, few demands. Perfect for a white America that Coates diagnoses as “obsessed with the politics of personal exoneratio­n.”

The decision to move up the publicatio­n of Between the World and Me is instructiv­e. Originally slated for early September, the book was released in July instead, because of the surge of outrage and interest that followed the Charleston massacre. “It spoke to this moment,” Christophe­r Jackson, executive editor of Spiegel & Grau, told the Wall Street Journal.

The irony is that, if you read this book and take it seriously, it is obvious that the moment for Between the World and Me is far more than July 2015. It is also last summer. And last century. And long before then, and long to come. There is no “moment.” Racism requires no news hook; it already has too many. Yet the move by Coates’s publisher seems to betray a worry that there is something fleeting or merely fashionabl­e here, that even a writer with the reach and talent of Coates may have difficulty retaining his appeal. Or worse, I fear, he will grow increasing­ly radicalize­d before a lovely, enlightene­d audience that continues to read, continues to applaud and continues to do nothing.

And there’s little beauty in that struggle.

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