University Press of America
Pages: 400
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-2562-3 • Paperback • May 2003 • $91.99 • (£71.00)
H. Viscount 'Berky' Nelson, Ph.D. is the Director of the Center for Student Programming and Lecturer in Social Sciences at UCLA.
Chapter 1 Preface
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 Consciousness of Race: Late Nineteenth Century Leaders and the Prelude to Modern Leadership; The Rising Color Line; Progressives and the Search for Opportunity; The 1920s: A Restructuring of Black Leadership
Chapter 4 Consciousness of Class: The Great Depression and New Directions in Black Leadership; World War II and the Genesis of Modern Leadership; The 1950s: Civil Rights as a Middle Class Panacea; The 1960s: A Decade of Contentious Leadership
Chapter 5 Consciousness of Self: The Nixon Years and the Retrenchment of Civil Rights; The Waning of Black Leadership; Gatekeepers at the Door
Chapter 6 Epilogue
Chapter 7 Notes
Chapter 8 Bibliography
Chapter 9 Index
Nelson makes a strong contribution to works analyzing black leadership....His most valuable insights describe how the development of the black bourgeoisie and the ethics of free market opportunism in recent decades have led potential community leaders to shift their leadership skills away from the African American community and toward personal successes outside that community....Nelson offers wisdom on why leaders lead and how they function in a changing society that is particularly, not exclusively, African American. Summing Up: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. All levels/collections.
— J. H. Smith, Wake Forest University; Choice Reviews
H. Viscount Nelson's sense of outrage is a welcome relief from the blandness of contemporary rationalizations. The anger and compassion in this volume provide a fine contribution to contemporary college course readings and might even inspire a more committed leadership and scholarship.
— M.W., City University of New York; Leadership Matters