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Black Judas : William Hannibal Thomas And The American Negro

  • Black Judas : William Hannibal Thomas And The American  Negro
  • Attribution

    John David Smith
  • Publication Details

    Book, University of Georgia Press, 2000
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
      (LOWER LEVEL)  E185.97.T545 S55 2000         AVAILABLE

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  • Author

  • Subject

  • Places in this work

  • Notes

    • "William Hannibal Thomas (1843-1935), an Ohio mulatto who served with distinction in the U.S. Colored Troops during the Civil War, was a self-professed - and nationally known - critic of his own race. Black Judas tells the story of Thomas’s transformation from a critical but optimistic black nationalist to a cynical black Negrophobe as the twentieth century dawned. This radical change erupted in Thomas’s 1901 publication of The American Negro, a blatantly insulting attack on African Americans that located "the Negro problem" in the black community and grossly characterized the entire race as inherently inferior. In his writings and actions, Thomas distanced himself from his race, recommending that blacks model themselves after "notable" mulattoes - persons like himself. In doing so Thomas projected on African Americans his own complicated emotional and physical problems. Outraged, his critics called him "Black Judas" and orchestrated a campaign that transformed Thomas into one of the most hated African Americans of all time." "In this illuminating study, John David Smith examines William Hannibal Thomas’s dramatic behavioral and ideological shifts. Smith contextualizes them in light of Thomas’s subjection to white racism and the emotional and physical effects of untreatable pain resulting from the amputation of his right arm during the Civil War. Black Judas, the first full-length biography of Thomas, traces his life- long pattern of self-destruction in the wake of repeated professional successes."–BOOK JACKET
  • Contents

    • Introduction - An African American Enigma
    • Ch. 1. Student, Servant, Soldier
    • Ch. 2. Questions of Character
    • Ch. 3. Missed Opportunities and Unresolved Allegations
    • Ch. 4. Lawyer and Legislator in South Carolina
    • Ch. 5. U.S. Consul and Racial Reformer
    • Ch. 6. Author of The American Negro
    • Ch. 7. A Man Without a Race
    • Ch. 8. I Am Alone in the World
    • Epilogue - A Tragic Mulatto and a Tragic Negro
    • App. 1. The Multiple William H. Thomases - - App. 2. Circular Letter From the Committee on Morals and Religion for 1901, Hampton Negro Conference
  • ISBN

    • 0820321303
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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