The BN Village  
Home FAQ Members Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


Welcome to the African and Caribbean Social network.

You are currently are in guest mode which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access other features. By joining this free African Caribbean Social utility you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), upload images, add videos, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, join the African and Caribbean community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
Go Back   The BN Village > Creative Village > Book Review
Reload this Page **Book Review**: FROM "SUPERMAN" TO MAN by J.A. Rogers

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
imported post
(#1 (permalink))
Old
Shemsi en Tehuti's Avatar
Shemsi en Tehuti is Offline
Villager Senior
Shemsi en Tehuti is an unknown quantity at this point
 
Posts: 4,136
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: , Florida, USA
Post imported post - 27-09-06, 02:05 AM

Below you will find the book cover with a good synopsis written on the front. In my opinion, J.A. Rogers is one of our most prolific historians. I recommend every Pan-Africanist to attain his three volume work, Sex and Race, in conjunction with this riveting historically poignant work, From "Superman" To Man as well as his other works.

Although this is a novel, J.A. Rogers is a pure blood historian. On every page turned, you will find another perhapslittle, or previously unknown,fact about the African. The story line is about how a "polished, well-educated, universally-travelled" African man named Dixon meets a racist Southern Senator where they engage in a conversation on a train ride in the early 1900's in the United States. This is a great work of historically accurate fiction that engages the reader to think about many issues of race relations between the African and the European.

This is not going to be a typical book review you may be used to. Below the book cover, you will find a list of questions that the book commands the reader to think about. It would be a very interesting discussion if my people here at Blacknet actually addressed any or all of the questions from their perspective.




[align=center][/align]
Following each question there are the page numbers that reference the book's related discussion:
  1. Dixon reflects on a particular passage stating: "The doctrine of inequality is emphatically a science of white peoples. It is they who have invented it." Is this an over-statement, under-statement, or an accurate assessment of White behavior in regards to African peoples? p 8-9.
  2. Do you find America to be hypocritical, especially the North, given slavery was first legalized in Massachusetts, yet the North only sought to abolish slavery in the South after their supply of slaves ended from the English and the South wielded more political power? p 10.
  3. When the Senator finds Dixon reading a "serious" book, he asks him if he was reading the Bible. Is this indicative of a slave vestige expected of us by Whites to maintain subservience, passivity, and lack of self-determination in African-Americans? p 12.
  4. Do you think that the White Supremacist perception that African people had not attained anything civilized in history (unless conducted by Whites) has abased today's social constructs (politics, education, religion, etc.)? p 18-20.
  5. Although a sensitive issue for African peoples, do we still view ourselves as inferior to whites given the unremitting thermal and chemical hair straightening, skin bleaching, as well as other agents to look more like the European? p 25-26.
  6. The Senator exclaims that African-Americans cannot reason for themselves given Whites denigrated them with the
    N-word, yet mimic Whites in everything to the extent of calling themselves this derogatory word. Given the rather prevalent use of the N-word even today amongst African-Americans, what can be reasoned from the Senator's comments? p 27.

  7. What do you think of the Senator's comments that no amount of training will enable African-Americans to govern themselves? p 37-38.
  8. Is there such a thing as sexual immorality? If so, is there an intrinsic difference between African and European people in regards to it? p 40-44.
  9. Is it common to find Whites over-state their best qualities to associate with their own people, yet paint all African people the same according to their less desirable qualities exhibited only by a few people? p 62-63.
  10. Do African-Americans have more respect for White-owned businesses rather than their own? p 63.
  11. Was life better in the North or South for African-Americans before the Civil Rights Movement? Is it any different today? p 70-71.
  12. Do you agree with Dixon's stance that we do not need, nor should we want, "social equality"? p 73-78.
    • It is interesting that some African peoples begged Lincoln not to sign the Emancipation Proclamation.
    • Dixon affirms that African people primarily only want open competition in the markets.
    • Note: "social equality" is different from "civil rights"
  13. Is racial intermarriage and interbreeding inherently good, bad, neither, or does it depend on the conditions surrounding such unions and procreation? p 78-91.
    • What about persons of mixed parentage (black and white) marrying a White person? What if they marry a Black person?
    • Are the Whites that enter into interracial relations with African-Americans typically of a lower class or undesirable by their White peers? p 90.
  14. Do you agree that the more "educated" we become in America, the more "unhappy" we are? p 98.
    • Could this have more to do with the type of education we receive?
  15. The 1930 U.S. Census statistics showed Whites having far greater numbers in proportion to their population of doctors and lawyers, yet African-Americans in proportion had about twice as many preachers compared to Whites. Do things appear to be any different today? p 99.
  16. Since we did not receive reparations after American slavery, do you think it is due (or perhaps overdue) today? p 102.
    • Dixon feels that if justice was due, the entire South would have been handed over to Blacks/Africans.
    • General Sherman's promise of "40 acres and a mule" as reparations after the Civil War was recanted.
  17. Considering the exponential increase of mental and physical health issues (stress anxiety, high blood pressure, obesity, etc.) in the last 30 years, are certain endorsements of Western culture detrimental to our mental and physical health? p 107-108.
    • Dixon presents evidence that African people were naturally more fit mentally and physically and that the decline in vitality in Whites was significantly due to nervous strain.
  18. What do you think of Dixon's remarks that "the greatest hindrance to the progress of the Negro" is the Christian religion "shot into him during slavery" (like dope)? p 114-115.
  19. Do you agree that both the Democratic and Republican parties view African-Americans the same, therefore we should not hand our vote to any particular one? p 115-117.
    • Dixon says that the Democratic party back then was frank in expressing it clearly did not want African people. Have the roles between Democrats and Republicans reversed since the Civil Rights Movement?


A Luta Continua—Lasima Tushinde Mbilishaka

Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
Remove advertisements
Advertisement
Advertisement Sponsored links

imported post
(#2 (permalink))
Old
FredB is Offline
Villager Senior
FredB
 
Posts: 1,407
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: , ,
Post imported post - 27-09-06, 02:34 AM

@Shemsi said:'In my opinion, J.A. Rogers is one of our most prolific historians. I recommend every Pan-Africanist to attain his three volume work, Sex and Race, in conjunction with this riveting historically poignant work, From "Superman" To Man as well as his other works.


Agreedniceone.gif

FB
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
imported post
(#3 (permalink))
Old
Shemsi en Tehuti's Avatar
Shemsi en Tehuti is Offline
Villager Senior
Shemsi en Tehuti is an unknown quantity at this point
 
Posts: 4,136
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: , Florida, USA
Post imported post - 27-09-06, 02:58 AM

FredB wrote:
Quote:
@Shemsi said:'In my opinion, J.A. Rogers is one of our most prolific historians. I recommend every Pan-Africanist to attain his three volume work, Sex and Race, in conjunction with this riveting historically poignant work, From "Superman" To Man as well as his other works.


Agreedniceone.gif

FB
Quote:
Too many people sleep on J.A. Rogers' work.



A Luta Continua—Lasima Tushinde Mbilishaka

Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
imported post
(#4 (permalink))
Old
name is Offline
Villager
name
 
Posts: 530
Join Date: May 2004
Location: , ,
Post imported post - 27-09-06, 04:16 PM

I bought a copy of it after I saw it recommended here, I agree with you both. It really is an excellent book.


Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
imported post
(#5 (permalink))
Old
Tahliba is Offline
Villager Senior
Tahliba
 
Posts: 1,602
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Birmingham, , United Kingdom
Post imported post - 19-05-07, 02:44 PM

FredB wrote:
Quote:
@Shemsi said:'In my opinion, J.A. Rogers is one of our most prolific historians. I recommend every Pan-Africanist to attain his three volume work, Sex and Race, in conjunction with this riveting historically poignant work, From "Superman" To Man as well as his other works.


Agreedniceone.gif

FB
A brilliant and must read for everyone.

infact many of JA Rogers books are 'interesting' ie Race and Class


If we do not have an accurate analysis of the problem, we cannot possibly develop a good strategy to resolve it.
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in Technorati Share On Face Book!Stumble this Post!
Reply With Quote
Remove advertisements
Advertisement
Advertisement Sponsored links

Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
European female writes New Nation and claims white women "helped" the "black" ca Prince Hakeem The Village Square. 10 18-05-07 11:57 PM
Book says whites are the "work of the Devil" Black_Power The Village Square. 0 22-04-07 10:49 AM
"From Superman to Man" blackneck Black Roots Village 0 30-03-06 02:41 AM
New Superman movie "Superman returns" urbanorder Film Village 0 26-02-06 11:23 AM
Definition of the word,"heaven", as used in the "Old" and "New" Testa SOLOMON Spirituality & Religion Village 27 04-07-05 07:00 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:10 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.1.0
Internet Marketing by: Firm SEO
Ad Management by RedTyger