Sellout, Randall Kennedy
Sellout, Randall Kennedy
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Sellout
The Politics of Racial Betrayal

Author: Randall Kennedy

Narrator: Tovah Ott

Unabridged: 5 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/13/2021


Synopsis

In the wake of his controversial national best-seller, Nigger: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word, Randall Kennedy grapples brilliantly and judiciously with another stigma of our racial discourse: "selling out," or racial betrayal, which is a subject of much anxiety and acrimony in Black America. He atomizes the vicissitudes of the term and shows how its usage bedevils blacks and whites, while elucidating the effects it has on individuals and on our society as a whole.

Kennedy begins his exploration of selling out with a cogent, historical definition of the "black" community, accounting precisely for who is considered black and who is not. He looks at the ways in which prominent members of that community--Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, and Barack Obama, among others--have been stigmatized as sellouts. He outlines the history of the suspicion of racial betrayal among blacks, and he shows how current fears of selling out are expressed in thought and practice. He offers a rigorous and bracing case study of the quintessential "sellout"--Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, perhaps the most vilified black public official in American history. And he gives is a first-person reckoning of how he himself has dealt with accusations of having sold out at Harvard, especially after the publication of Nigger.

Lucidly and powerfully articulated, Sellout is essential to any discussion of the troubled history of race in America.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Faith on June 20, 2011

I enjoyed reading this book. Kennedy has a very engaging writing style that makes a rather grave subject accessible. I didn't agree with all of the conclusions that Kennedy made (i.e. his comparison of racial outing and sexual orientation outing) but Kennedy looks at the issue of selling out with a......more

Goodreads review by Eddie S. on October 04, 2016

Was really expecting something phenomenal from the title of the book, only to briskly read it and find out that the book was ordinary. This book exposed a lot of history I didn't know of, but the book felt like a defense of 'sambos' and race traitors. The Clarence Thomas part was written well, but f......more

Goodreads review by Nikki on February 09, 2008

Excellent! Excellent! Upon reading this, I was appalled at how little of black history I knew (I'm white from California). The point of this book is that African Americans are often at odds within their community of which of their leaders has "sold out" and which haven't, leaders both historical and......more

Goodreads review by Socraticgadfly on December 06, 2012

This is a great book that provides an insightful and even-handed look at the use of the word "sellout" by some African-Americans against other blacks. Kennedy is personally qualified, as he notes near the end of the book. Besides being a professor at Harvard Law and the author of previous black socio......more

Goodreads review by matt on May 23, 2008

Kennedy's tendency to go off on tangents would be more forgivable if this book wasn't so brief. His lengthy examination of Clarence Thomas is the only place where this volume seems adequate. Elsewhere, Kennedy seems to cherry pick whatever random facts about passing and African American sell-outs su......more


Quotes

Sellout is brisk and enjoyable, no small feat given the density of its ideas. . . . Worth reading for the light it shines on many subtleties of black history.”—Los Angeles Times Book Review

“Thought-provoking. . . . [Kennedy offers] illuminating evidence that, despite great marks of progress, race's stranglehold on the nation's collective conscious remains as strong as ever.”—The Washington Post
“Fresh. . . . Elegant and open-minded. . . . Sellout does a great deal to complicate the politics of racial betrayal.”—Salon.com

“A cool, clean case against the use of a backwards epithet that discourages something black America can hardly do without-coherent and original thought.”—The New York Sun