On Mon, 31 Jul 2006 20:52:35 -0500 "Austin Jackson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
writes:
> I'm a student of African American and African Studies interested in
> Black people's experience with Marxism/socialism.  I subscribed to
> this list, on the recommendation of a classmate, hoping to learn 
> more,
> and just read this assessment of Cornel West's article, The Spirit 
> of
> Spinoza:
> 

Auatin,

Below is Ralph Dumain's considered opinion
of Cornel West (minus all the cuss words).

Jim F.
-----------------------------------------
CORNEL WEST'S EVASION OF PHILOSOPHY,
OR, RICHARD WRIGHT'S REVENGE

by Ralph Dumain

[REVIEW OF: West, Cornel. "Philosophy and the Afro-American experience",
The Philosophical Forum, vol. 9, nos. 2-3, winter-spring 1977-78, p.
117-148.]

If one wants to see where a philosopher gets lost, one needs to go back
to the root thought patterns that set the thinker in question in his
misbegotten ways. This early essay by Cornel West proves instructive in
this regard.

West opens with a review of three modern approaches to philosophy,
exemplified by Heidegger, Wittgenstein, and Dewey. Not surprisingly, West
most favors Dewey. Dewey possesses the virtues of the others in denying
the autonomy of philosophy and deeming it "inextricably bound to culture,
society, and history", but he retains the normative function of
philosophy as well. Dewey's great conception of philosophy is summed up
thusly (original italicized): "Philosophy is the interpretation of a
people's past for the purpose of solving specific problems presently
confronting the cultural way of life from which the people come." (p.
122) Note that this pragmatist creed is a canonical form of subjective
idealism. Philosophy is both expressive and critical, but it doesn't seem
to be grounded in any rational norms or notion of objectivity, but rather
some arbitrarily defined social need. Given West's philosophic models
(which, note, explicitly exclude anything scientific), one cannot be
surprised at his adoption of subjectivism.

Already off on the wrong foot, West goes on to define Afro-American
philosophy (original italicized):

"Afro-American philosophy is the interpretation of Afro-American history,
highlighting the cultural heritage and political struggles, which
provides desirable norms that should regulate responses to particular
challenges presently confronting Afro-Americans." (p. 122-123)

The most interesting feature of this otherwise insipid formulation is
that this is not philosophy at all. Philosophy is not just holding views
or even interpretation, but above all method utilizing some system of
abstract concepts. Does West give any criteria, logical, epistemic, or
even normative?

"The particular historical phenomena interpreted and justified by
Afro-American philosophy consist of religious doctrines, political
ideologies, artistic expressions and unconscious modes of behavior; such
phenomena serve as raw ingredients to be utilized by Afro-American
philosophy in order to interpret the Afro-American past and defend
particular norms within this past." (p.123)

Not only is this a most provincial definition of what a black philosopher
should be concerned with, but worse, the task is to defend particular
norms within this past, based on no rationally justified particular
criteria or general world view. Where is the black atheist according to
this formulation, let alone the black thinker who might be interested in
mathematical logic, quantum mechanics, or Chinese medicine?

The two foremost challenges are self-image and self-determination. The
notion of modernity is central to historical interpretation.
Afro-Americans may be viewed as passive objects or active subjects of
history. West then proceeds to outline four ideal types of Afro-American
thought: vitalist, rationalist, existentialist and humanist. Here I will
repeat only the leading sentences of each type (minus italics), leaving
out the strong and weak versions of each:

 "The Afro-American vitalist tradition lauds the uniqueness of
Afro-American culture and personality."

 "The Afro-American rationalist tradition considers Afro-American culture
and personality to be pathological."

 "The Afro-American existentialist tradition posits Afro-American culture
to be restrictive, constraining and confining."

 "The Afro-American humanist tradition extolls [sic] the distinctiveness
of Afro-American culture and personality." (p. 124-125)

This is West's fundamental classificatory scheme. Note the peculiar
labels associated with each description, especially that the most
negative type is called "rationalist". I suppose this is natural, given
that West's known pro-Christian and anti-scientific attitude implies that
a black rationalist who opposes his religious tradition could only hold a
negative view of black culture. It is nonetheless highly tendentious in a
not very intelligent way. Of course, West admits these four types are not
manifested in a pure form, but what becomes of the value of this
classification when a single person falls into categories 2-4
simultaneously? (Type 1 differs from 4 in being what today we would call
Afrocentric.) Apart from the superficiality of this interpretive
framework and the tendentiousness of its labelling, its most glaring
defect is the lack of warrant (of grounding in a rationally justifiable
world view) for holding any of these views. Each view is no doubt based
on empirical evidence and value judgments, but no more general criteria
are adduced for accepting one over the others.

I will focus on only one of West's examples, for it exemplifies a grudge
I have long held against him from comments made elsewhere, namely his
baseless character assassination of Richard Wright. Wright epitomizes the
existentialist tradition. Wright is the epitome of personal rebellion and
the marginal man:

 "Wright tried to create an Afro-American self-image that rests solely
upon personal revolt ... His revolt was intense, but it never
crystallized into any serious talk of concerted action partly because
such talk presupposes a community, a set of common values and goals, at
which a marginal man like Wright can only sneer." (p. 136)

Every word in this characterization is a lie, including "and" and "the".
Did West go by unchecked received wisdom, crib from Cliff Notes, or did
he actually bother to read anything by or about Wright? West's
foolishness could only begin to make sense if one goes by Wright's
so-called "existentialist" period of the early 1950s and then doesn't
bother to study that either. It is obvious that Wright devoted his entire
lifetime as a writer preoccupied with concerted action and not just
individual revolt. Not for one second did Wright ever sneer. Why doesn't
West just come out and admit he can't forgive Wright for rejecting
religion? Indeed, such rejection, when it becomes public, does tend to
isolate one from black community life, and West the Christian prophet
just can't abide by this given his commitment to irrationalism. From
West, one would not even know that Wright loved gospel music and said "I
love my people." West assumes that for one to recognize openly and
honestly the severe limitations of one's background and upbringing that
one must be a snob.

Interestingly, Wright was much better understood by Constance Webb, one
of Wright's contemporaries and friends and a white woman to boot. In her
writings, Webb always emphasized Wright's sense of social responsibility
and his frustrated need to find an adequate social conception of the type
of world he would want to live in. Unbeknownst to the general public,
Webb's analysis of Wright was informed by the ideas of her husband (for a
stretch during the 1940s), C.L.R. James.

An examination of Wright's 1953 novel The Outsider makes absolutely plain
that Wright, in the desperate corner into which the Cold War backed
humanity, was searching for a social conception, explicitly rejecting man
alone as a viable option. Wright as we all know had become disillusioned
with Communism, and he was not about to support the racist and regimented
American way of life either. Wright states with excruciating explicitness
that he is searching for a third conception upon which to organize
society, but he hasn't the foggiest notion of what it might be.

But now back to West's article. West lauds James Baldwin's (in)famous
attack on Wright, paraphrasing Baldwin's claim: "Wright succumbed to the
cold, lifeless, abstract categories of social scientists" and never
learned to accept "our humanity". (p. 137) I'm not sure what this
amorphous verbiage is supposed to mean. The picture of humanity Wright
paints in The Outsider is very bleak, intentionally so, given the social
crisis Wright seeks to depict. He is more inclined to criticize humanity
than to accept it as it is. In fact, Wright berates the Communists for
wanting man to remain just as he is only with themselves in charge. But
if Wright's plot and perhaps characters take on a certain schematism in
order to illustrate his ideas, Wright is anything but a lifeless and
abstract social scientist. For Wright states as his goal the reclamation
of human subjectivity, which the Communists want to do away with.

Ironically, in firing on Wright and favoring Baldwin's greatness, West
shoots himself in the foot. For West admits that Baldwin's portrayal of
black life in Go Tell It On The Mountain is as bleak as Wright's,
virtually identical, in fact, and based on a recognition that undesirable
"qualities evolved from a rigid, fundamentalist Christian home" (p. 137).
So what differentiates Baldwin from Wright?

"Unlike Wright, Baldwin's rebellion is not for deeper marginality or
further isolation. Instead, his is a search for community, a community of
love and tolerance denied him by Afro-American culture. Baldwin does not
abhor this culture; he simply cannot overlook the stifling effects it has
on nonconformists." (p. 137)

West does not realize what a fool he is making of himself here, for he
has totally undermined his own argument. Here is a distinction without a
difference. However their fictional worlds may differ, in real life
Baldwin was an expatriate in Paris along with Wright. In real life, while
Baldwin was symbolically slaying father Wright, Wright did not withdraw
into isolation but was politically vocal and active, and his activity
drew the attention and covert action of the CIA, whose shenanigans Wright
not only outwitted but openly denounced.

And now turnabout is fair play. For Wright did have a philosophical
commitment, which was rooted in his experience as a black American but
was not confined to an expression or even critique of its norms. His
"existentialism" was based on a global view of the problems of
"modernity" that West finds central: urbanization, industrialization,
loss of religious and other traditions, loss of community, etc. Wright's
reclamation of "subjectivity" is not an affirmation of subjectivism, for
Wright is a conscious partisan of the modern, industrial, scientific,
secular and non-religious way of life, and furthermore he states: "My
color is not my country." For Wright, the peculiar circumstances of black
American life will make black people "psychological men, like the Jews",
"centers of knowing", favorably positioned (because so unfavorably
positioned) to be able to discern and communicate what modern man is all
about the world over. Were Wright to formalize his philosophy, he would
undoubtedly do so based on some arrangement of abstract principles, and
not endorse a subjectivist, anti-scientific view of reality even while
incorporating Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Husserl, or Sartre into his view of
social and subjective experience.

 In my view, Richard Wright (rivalled only by Ralph Ellison) is the most
important American literary intellectual of the century. To be sure, we
know so much more today and we are oh so much more sophisticated, but
where are our standards? For Wright came from the absolute godforsaken
bottom, rural Mississippi around the turn of the century, and this
high-school dropout ended up in Paris as a peer of Jean-Paul Sartre. No
thinker ever underwent a more excruciating journey of the body and of the
mind to get to the place where he ended up, and so there is no excuse for
the half-assed mediocrity that passes for thinking today. With our
Gramsci and our postmodernism and whatnot we ought to be on a much higher
plane than we are, and we ought to have our most famous public
philosopher functioning on a much higher conceptual level than the
slapdash opportunistic philosophical banality exemplified throughout the
career of Cornel West.

REFERENCE LIST

De Genova, Nick. "Gangster rap and nihilism in Black America: some
questions of life and death", Social Text, no. 43, 1995, p. 89-132.

James, C.L.R. American Civilization. Oxford, UK: Blackwell, 1993.

Webb, Constance. Richard Wright: A Biography. New York: G.P. Putnam's
Sons, 1968.

Webb, Constance. "What next for Richard Wright?, Phylon, 2nd quarter,
1949, p. 161-166.

West, Cornel. The American Evasion of Philosophy: A Genealogy of
Pragmatism. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1989.

West, Cornel. "Black Radicalism and the Marxist Tradition", Monthly
Review, Vol. 40, No. 4, September 1988, p. 51-56.

West, Cornel. "Philosophy and the Afro-American experience", The
Philosophical Forum, vol. 9, nos. 2-3, winter-spring 1977-78, p. 117-148.

West, Cornel. Prophetic Reflections: Notes on Race and Power in America.
Monroe, Me.: Common Courage Press, 1993.

Wright, Richard. Conversations with Richard Wright. Edited by Kenneth
Kinnamon and Michel Fabre. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi,
1993.

Wright, Richard. Works. Volume 2. Later Works: Black Boy (American
Hunger); The Outsider. New York, N.Y.: Library of America, 1991. (The
Library of America; no. 56)

(Published in: AAH Examiner [The Newsletter of African Amercians for
Humanism], vol. 6, no. 1, Spring 1996, pp. 3-6)

© 1996, 2000

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