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Narrated by:
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Brad Sanders
About this listen
Home is, in effect, the ideological autobiography of LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka. The two dozen essays that constitute this book were written during a five-year span - a turbulent and critical period for African Americans and Whites. The Cuban Revolution, the Birmingham bombings, Robert Williams’s Monroe Defense movement, the Harlem riots, the assassination of Malcolm X...each changed the way Jones/Baraka looked at America. This progressive change is recorded with honesty, anger, and passion in his writings.
©2021 LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka) (P)2021 Scribd AudioListeners also enjoyed...
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I Understand.
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Overall
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Performance
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Thank You
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Overall
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Performance
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Let me guess? Locke was a gay black man?
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- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
The last generation of Americans with a living memory of Jim Crow will soon disappear. They leave behind a collective memory of segregation shaped increasingly by its horrors and heroic defeat, but not a nuanced understanding of everyday life in Jim Crow America. In The South, Adolph L. Reed Jr.—New Orleanian, political scientist, and according to Cornel West, "the greatest democratic theorist of his generation"—takes up the urgent task of recounting the granular realities of life in the last decades of the Jim Crow South.
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Adolph Reed is a master.
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