Black Judas

Regular price €43.99
A01=John David Smith
accommodation
amalgamation
assimilation
Author_John David Smith
black nationalism
booker t. washington
carpetbagger
Category=DNBH
Category=NHK
colored
discrimination
emancipation
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
gilded age
jim crow
lynching
miscegenation
mongrelization
mulatto
negro
paternalism
race traitor
racial uplift
racism
segregation

Product details

  • ISBN 9780820356266
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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William Hannibal Thomas (1843–1935) served with distinction in the U.S. Colored Troops in the Civil War (in which he lost an arm) and was a preacher, teacher, lawyer, state legislator, and journalist following Appomattox. In many publications up through the 1890s, Thomas espoused a critical though optimistic black nationalist ideology. After his mid-twenties, however, Thomas began exhibiting a self-destructive personality, one that kept him in constant trouble with authorities and always on the run. His book The American Negro (1901) was his final self-destructive act.

Attacking African Americans in gross and insulting language in this utterly pessimistic book, Thomas blamed them for the contemporary “Negro problem” and argued that the race required radical redemption based on improved “character,” not changed “color.” Vague in his recommendations, Thomas implied that blacks should model themselves after certain mulattoes, most notably William Hannibal Thomas.

Black Judas is a biography of Thomas, a publishing history of The American Negro, and an analysis of that book’s significance to American racial thought. The book is based on fifteen years of research, including research in postamputation trauma and psychoanalytic theory on selfhatred, to assess Thomas’s metamorphosis from a constructive race critic to a black Negrophobe. John David Smith argues that his radical shift resulted from key emotional and physical traumas that mirrored Thomas’s life history of exposure to white racism and intense physical pain.

JOHN DAVID SMITHis the Charles H. Stone Distinguished Professor of American History at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He is the author and editor of thirty books, including An Old Creed for the New South: Proslavery Ideology and Historiography, 1865–1918; Lincoln and the U.S. Colored Troops; and Black Soldiers in Blue: African American Troops in the Civil War Era.