Charene Hawkins Professor Holder May 18th, 2016 AAD 160 Book Report: The Autobiography of Malcolm X Throughout history, we’ve learned about a majority of all the civil rights leaders and how they fought for equal rights and to end segregation. Malcolm X was one of the main civil rights leaders that demanded change and would do anything necessary to acquire it. To understand a man with such wisdom, guidance, perseverance, courage and drive you have to walk through his life. The autobiography of Malcolm X takes you through the journey of brother X’s life and the trials, tribulations and challenges he faced to find himself and what he was destined to do.
This journal article belabours the point that is also a common theme in “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”: Malcolm’s changing views on civil rights. Again as a result of his tumultuous childhood because of the “white man”, Malcolm generalizes all white people as essentially haters of blacks because of the negative experiences he’s had with them and the tragic ways they treated him. But, as he grows older and matures, Malcolm has the eye-opening experience of seeing people of all colors worship next to each other. This is an interaction between blacks and whites that creates a positive environment as an outcome.
Malcolm’s Family was refused aid because they were black, Malcolm was put into this situation because he was black, Malcolm was being oppressed on every front because he was black. Malcolm was systemically oppressed from whites in generally and his very own government, which started of the Autobiography with a very blunt and apparent idea of systemic oppression.
In the first part of the chapter, Kelley shows that Malcolm tries to erase his origins and embrace his urban life by adopting the style of the zoot suit in order to be part of a group and fight the oppression created by the white man which also creates tension among black themselves. Indeed, this idea can be linked to Ellison’s riddle which was: In other words, the old man illustrates the division between the former generation of immigrant and the younger generation of African American who decided to embrace their identity and fight peacefully against the oppression of White people. The old man says that he is a traitor because he chose to listen to the government instead of joining the movement created by the Black community. The lexical
Since I already had somewhat background information, I decided that it was best if I wrote my essay specifically about him. I was also curious to know about his last him, after his release from Charlestown Prison; he changed his name to Malcolm X, and the X symbolized the unidentified name of his African ancestors and their tradition that had been lost during slavery. After viewing this film, my opinion changed about how one’s life is affected by so much negativity can drastically improve just by having the right people in your life, I simply learned that is never too late to realize the mistakes one has made and how to fix them. Even after dropping West Junior High School at the age of 15, he was an addict to drugs, went to jail and had no parents support, he now has a position in where an entire film is made about his life. The historical significance of this film is that it is about a man who contributed so much to society, Malcolm X is now known as the African-American leader and is an important figure worldwide, and he also articulated concepts of Black Nationalism in the 1950s and
Epilogue Malcolm x, a muslim scholar who dedicated his life to finding peace between blacks and whites. Malcolm x being a black muslim, hated the terms slave, nigger, and white America. Malcolm x devoted his life to contributing to the nation of Islam, but he also showed the blacks another side. The followers of Martin Luther King were taught to be non-violent and allow themselves to get beaten up by police and other whites, Malcolm x told his followers to defend themselves if anyone was to attack them. A few years before Malcolm x was assassinated he met someone named Alex Haley, a black reporter.
"A man who stands for nothing will fall for anything." (Malcolm X). The Awakening of Malcolm X by Ilyasah Shabazz and Tiffany D. Jackson follows the life of Malcolm X, starting from when he went to prison. Malcolm grew up with his father killed by the Ku Klux Klan for being too outspoken on racial topics and his mother institutionalized. He and his best friend, Shorty, went to prison after being manipulated and tricked by his white girlfriend, Sophia.
Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and the Civil Rights Struggle of the 1950s and 1960s. A Brief History with Documents written by David Howard-Pitney is a great history book that gives us an entry into two important American thinkers and a tumultuous part of American history. This 207-pages book was published by Bedford/St. Martin’s in Boston, New York on February 20, 2004. David Howard-Pitney worked at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Papers Project at Stanford University in 1986, and that made him a specialist on American civil religion and African-American leaders ' thought and rhetoric (208). Another publication of Howard-Pitney is The African-American Jeremiad: Appeals for Justice in America.
Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little on May 19, 1925 in Omaha, Nebraska. Malcolm was exposed to white racism and the black separatist movement at an early age. His father, Earl Little, was a Baptist minister and a follower of Jamaican-born, black nationalist Marcus Garvey. When the Littles lived in Nebraska, the Ku Klux Klan tried to prevent the Reverend Little from conveying Garvey's teachings. The Littles consequently left Nebraska, eventually settling in Mason, Michigan, where they found the racial climate no better.
As an infant to the man he became, Malcolm X experienced the extreme hardships like being taken away from his family, and only being able to work labor jobs and being a hustler. Malcolm X was sentenced to prison for eight to ten years in 1946. For those 7 years that Malcolm X was in prison he began to become educated and that's when Elijah Muhammad a messenger of the Nation of Islam saved him. Malcolm X took all the events that happened in his life and the lessons he learned from Nation of Islam came all together to create the philosophy he calls “Black Nationalism”. During the time of being separated from his family he saw how the government is unfair to the black community.
Due to Malcolm X’s struggles in his early life, he dealt with an internal anger and resentment towards the white race, which lead to him rebelling and acting out. When Malcolm X was only 6 years old, criminals murdered his father and sparked an internal flame of hatred. His anger convinced him to commit various crimes such as stealing. This acted as a way to rebel against his family and the white community; he would not accept going unnoticed, nor would he accept others as they treated him as inferior. Not only did young Malcolm steal, but he also fought frequently with his family members.
Malcolm had a terrible experience in his childhood. It was a nightmare to him. His father was killed and his mother got mental problem which needs to stay in the hospital forever. Then, the family members were separated. Malcolm lived with Swerlin who treat him like a pet.
Malcolm X was an American Muslim leader who contributed to the Civil Rights Movement by spreading his ideas of black nationalism in the 1950s and early ’60s. He was an influential figure in a black Islamic organization, Nation of Islam, and served as a spokesperson for the organization. He was assassinated on February 21, 1965 while making a speech in Harlem. After his death, his life story was made well-known through his autobiography, The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965) (Mamiya 1). Malcolm X is a man whose background and activism contributed to the Civil Rights Movement and America as a whole.
Introduction: Malcom X urges the Negro community to fight to gain the equal rights they deserve by taking action against their white oppressors. He emphasizes that blacks will gain their rights either thorough voting, with the ballot, or else through the inevitable violence with the bullet. Thesis [part a] Like Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., also fighting for the civil rights of black Americans in the 1960s, but in a more peaceful manner, Malcom X takes a different approach.
What makes a leader? I believe a leader to be intelligent ,tough, and has the determination to achieve a goal. Having certain skills will have an impact on you being a trustable leader. Being selfless and caring are also characteristics. Malcolm X his birth name Malcolm Little is a fine a example of a leader and has most of these leadership qualities.