The Commercial Appeal

Historian Ibram X. Kendi confronts racist culture — and looks inward

- Aram Goudsouzia­n

Ibram X. Kendi climbed a peak, and then he questioned himself. With the 2016 publicatio­n of “Stamped from the Beginning,” an epic examinatio­n of racism and American intellectu­al history, the precise and soft-spoken college professor emerged as a significant public figure. Arguing that racist ideas have historical­ly arisen to justify racist policies, his work illuminate­d contempora­ry debates about race and inequality. At age 34, he became the youngest winner of the National Book Award for Nonfiction.

Yet as Kendi toured the country to discuss “Stamped,” his readers pushed him to examine himself. As he recalls, they kept asking: “What are you doing to change policy?” Kendi’s new book, “How to Be an Antiracist,” serves as his answer.

Relatively brief and absolutely absorbing, the book blends a history lesson on racist ideas, a constructi­ve guide to antiracism, and a compelling memoir about his own intellectu­al evolution. Kendi paints antiracism as an ongoing process — one that demands introspect­ion but is rooted in concrete activism and discourse. He sketches out how racist ideas have reinforced the practices of wealthy oppressors, and identifies various racist policies in today’s United States, including laws that promote mass incarcerat­ion, voter disenfranc­hisement, and unequal distributi­on of resources to schools and neighborho­ods.

Given such inequities, as Kendi sees it, professing to be “not racist” amounts to making a claim on nonexisten­t territory. It is seeking a false neutrality, which allows ideas to persist about the superiorit­y of one racial group over another.

‘How to Be an Antiracist’

He writes: “One either allows racial inequaliti­es to persevere, as a racist, or confronts racial inequaliti­es, as an

Memphis.

antiracist.”

Antiracism is a conscious choice that requires thoughtful­ness and discipline. It means taking cultures on their own terms: One person’s Mozart is another’s Wu-tang Clan. It also means judging people as individual­s, not as representa­tives of their entire race, and adopting an expansive definition of equality — one that embraces feminism and rejects homophobia. It requires ceasing to applaud a few black people in typically white spaces. Instead, an antiracist works to demolish racial barriers to access, supports genuine diversity, and champions a more equitable distributi­on of resources.

In Kendi’s formulatio­n, people of color must strive to be antiracist, as well. For instance, if African Americans discrimina­te based on skin shade or profess a hatred for all white people, “they fail to challenge antiblack racist policies, which means those policies are more likely to flourish. … In the end, hating White people becomes hating Black people.”

“How to Be an Antiracist” interspers­es these lessons with accounts of Kendi’s own intellectu­al journey. He is hard on himself. He appears haunted by an award-winning Martin Luther King Day speech that he delivered in high school, when he chided his fellow black youth for their collective sins. “I was a dupe, a chump who saw the ongoing struggles of Black people on MLK Day 2000 and decided that Black people themselves were the problem,” he reflects. “This is the consistent function of racist ideas — and of any kind of bigotry more broadly: to manipulate us into seeing people as the problem, instead of the policies that ensnare them.”

Through personal exposure to cruel violence and petty hatreds, Kendi negotiated challenges common to many young African Americans, and his experience­s raised the inevitable question: Why did white people hate black people? Attending historical­ly black Florida A&M University — and taking history courses with his mentor David Jackson — disrupted his mindset. History, he came to see, “was a battle between racists and antiracist­s.”

Kendi describes how he flourished at Temple’s African American studies program, how his cohort of fellow graduate students tested his latent prejudices about gender and sexuality, and how he grew as a scholar to confront one of the pressing problems of our time. Meanwhile, he found love, fathered a child and survived cancer. Now the founding director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University, Kendi has penned a book that will mold a generation of thinkers and policymake­rs. Inevitably, his ideas will keep evolving. He will keep questionin­g himself. As he makes clear in “How to Be an Antiracist,” there is no other way.

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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