The Farrakhan phenomenon : race, reaction, and the paranoid style in American politics / Robert Singh.
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 publ...
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Language: | English |
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Washington, D.C. :
Georgetown University Press,
[1997], ©1997.
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Local Note: |
MSU: License agreement restricts access to one user at a time. |
Physical Description: | xii, 340 pages ; 24 cm |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Contents:
- 1. The Politics of Organized Hate
- 2. From the Margins to the Mainstream: The Rise of Louis Farrakhan
- 3. The Prophet Motive: The Theology and Ideology of Black Radical Reaction
- 4. The Paranoid Style in Black American Politics
- 5. The Popularity of Paranoia
- 6. Explaining Farrakhan
- 7. Toward an American Apartheid: Farrakhan and Black Leadership in the 1990s.