The Preacher and the Politician
Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama, and Race in America |
| Clarence E. Walker and Gregory D. Smithers |
| 160 pages, 5 1/2x 81/4 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2886-9 $22.95 |
| October 2009 |
 |
Barack Obama’s inauguration as the first African American
president of the United States has caused many commentators to
conclude that America has entered a postracial age. The Preacher
and the Politician argues otherwise, reminding us that, far
from inevitable, Obama’s nomination was nearly derailed
by his relationship with Jeremiah Wright, the outspoken former
pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ on the South Side of
Chicago. The media storm surrounding Wright’s sermons, the
historians Clarence E. Walker and Gregory D. Smithers suggest,
reveals that America’s fraught racial past is very much
with us, only slightly less obvious.
With meticulous research and insightful analysis, Walker and
Smithers take us back to the Democratic primary season of 2008,
viewing the controversy surrounding Wright in the context of key
religious, political, and racial dynamics in American history.
In the process they expose how the persistence of institutional
racism, and racial stereotypes, became a significant hurdle for
Obama in his quest for the presidency.
The authors situate Wright's preaching in African American religious
traditions dating back to the eighteenth century, but they also
place his sermons in a broader prophetic strain of Protestantism
that transcends racial categories. This latter connection was
consistently missed or ignored by pundits on the right and the
left who sought to paint the story in simplistic, and racially
defined, terms. Obama’s connection with Wright gave rise
to criticism that, according to Walker and Smithers, sits squarely
in the American political tradition, where certain words are meant
to incite racial fear, in the case of Obama with charges that
the candidate was unpatriotic, a Marxist, a Black Nationalist,
or a Muslim.
Once Obama became the Democratic nominee, the day of his election
still saw ballot measures rejecting affirmative action and undermining
the civil rights of other groups. The Preacher and the Politician
is a concise and timely study that reminds us of the need to continue
to confront the legacy of racism even as we celebrate advances
in racial equality and opportunity.
Clarence E. Walker, Professor
of History at the University of California, Davis, is the author
of Mongrel Nation: The America Begotten
by Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings and We Can’t
Go Home Again: An Argument about Afrocentrism.
Gregory
D. Smithers, author of Science, Sexuality, and Race
in the United States and Australia, 1780s-1890s,
is Lecturer
in American History at King’s College, University of Aberdeen
in Scotland.