Up from Slavery: An Autobiography
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Product Description
This Townsend Library classic has been carefully edited to be more accessible to today’s students. It includes a background note about the book, an leader’s biography, and a lively afterword. Acclaimed by educators nationwide, the Townsend Library is helping millions of young adults learn the pleasure and power of reading.Amazon.com Review
Nineteenth-century African American businessman, liberal, and educator Booker Taliaferro Washington’s Up from Slavery is one of the greatest American autobiographies ever written. Its mantras of black economic empowerment, land ownership, and self-help inspired generations of black leaders, including Marcus Garvey, Elijah Muhammad, Malcolm X, and Louis Farrakhan. In rags-to-riches fashion, Washington recounts his ascendance from early life as a mulatto slave in Virginia to a 34-year term as president of the influential, agriculturally based Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. From that position, Washington reigned as the most vital leader of his people, with slogans like “cast down your buckets,” which emphasized employment merit rather than the literary and political excellence championed by his contemporary rival W.E.B. Du Bois. Though many considered him too accommodating to segregationists, Washington, as he said in his historic “Atlanta Compromise” speech of 1895, believed that “political agitation alone would not save [the Negro],” and that “property, industry, skill, intelligence, and character” would prove necessary to black Americans’ success. The potency of his philosophies are alive today in the nationalist and conservative camps that compose the complex quilt of black American society.
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The original. He was kind of cool, but now he ain’t; people using his backwardness against us. Forget this dude, or perish. 1896 speech was a total sell out to da man.
Drop ya boots, dawg!!!
It
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
I read this book as a part of a class. In this class we discussed Washington’s work as written from the ‘trickster’ perspective. In this light it was reasonably appealing to see how he points out hypocrasies indirectly, while rumor has it that stating the opposite. Thus, making a self-aware hypocrasy within the text itself. I’m not sure that I am yet convinced, but. The work regularly seems a small bit on the acquiescent side to me.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5
This book was the most dull book I have ever read. There was no point to the whole book, because all he talked about was his accomplishments and things that additional people wrote about him. This book has no suspenseful or appealing parts in it. I feel that no one could ever like this book.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
This book is hard to get into at first because Washington, in my opinion, isn’t the greatest writer. He writes using many run-on sentences and MANY, MANY commas with phrases that can distract you from the meaning of the sentence (as a rule, notwithstanding, to such an extent, this is to say etc…) he seems to state his observations as if it is a fact. He tells how there were such fantastic relations between blacks & whites throughout the south and blacks held ABSOLUTELY NO resentment towards their slaveowners. I establish that hard to judge (how would he know when he was just a slave?) Many of his “facts” didn’t seem to agree with history and what I thought slavery and black/white relations were like. He nearly seemed ignorant to what was probably happening around him. He goes on to tell about his life and spends at least 1/2 of the book talking about his school in Tuskegee…after a while it gets dull and you want to hear some appealing tales about HIM! I didn’t reflect the book was too fantastic or very informative at all.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
I read this book, here in CearĂ¡, a state of Brazil.Even being an agronomist, I like to read books.This book is 100% available for free reading, on internet.This book was writen about 100 years ago, by an african-american , Booker T. Washington.
Born in a slum, having as his mother, a black slave, as a child, Booker T. Washington became free.His father was a white man, and never recognizable or make him.In fact, Booker T. Washington had a bitter childhood.Having a childhood cored in poverty, racism, prejudices, ignorance and hard labor; as a replacement for of becaming a neurotic, Booker T. Washington became a leader and teaching example for african-americans of his times.In fact many lessons of this book continuos to be usefull for every time, race or place.
If you go to all my reviews that I writen before, just one autobiography that I gave five stars was, “World of Yesterday” by Stephan Zweig.To be sincere in an autobiography is very, very rare.One problem of this autobiography, is again his lack of sincerity.The leader was writing about 100 years ago, and perhaps he couldn’t tells us, what he was really thinking.
To example, Booker T. never claims that segregation, racism/eugenics is/were by definition, terrible.In fact, there’s many excellent claims to some knowed eugenicists/racists at that times.The bitter leader’s childhood (a nightmare childhood), has very small space in this book.In fact, the sucess of Booker T. in education affairs has, huge space in this book.Too much space, I reflect.If we were in 1906, I’ll be giving five stars to this book.Being unsincere and having by today standards, some absurds, this book isn’t useless, but we aren’t in 1906.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5