Searching, timely and provocative…Finding both romanticism and pessimism inadequate as responses to our past and present, Terry endorses instead a vision of civil rights history drawn from King’s emphasis on the tragic.
-- Matthew F. Delmont New York Times Book Review
Terry’s interpretation of the civil rights movement inspires what he calls a tragic hope — the idea that because we have agency, we should still fight for progress even if victory is not guaranteed within our lifetime or ever. It’s an empowering view that underscores the political responsibility we all have to act, to do something, because the future is not yet written.
-- Abdallah Fayyad Boston Globe
A rich, comprehensive lesson in political philosophy and historiography. Terry leaves us with a guidebook for how to remember responsibly, helping us to avoid both nostalgia and nihilism, heroic fables and corrosive despair…The greatest compliment we can give a certain type of nonfiction is not that it reads like fiction but that it burns with prophetic fire, demanding that we think and live differently. Terry’s book does just that.
-- Caleb Gayle Washington Post
Eschews the conventional heroes, romanticism and rosy narratives of the civil rights era for a more complex and sober assessment of its modern day legacy.
-- Miguel Salazar and Laura Thompson New York Times
Part of a growing consciousness that the Obama-era liberal settlement is inadequate for black political thought, and theorizing anew is required.
-- Vincent Lloyd Compact Magazine
Informative, provocative and often brilliant…an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the Civil Rights Movement and race relations in the United States.
-- Glenn C. Altschuler Florida Courier
Stunning.
-- Brian Tanguay California Review of Books
Brandon Terry has written a book that will change how the civil rights movement is thought about and mobilized in our scholarship and in our politics. He engages the historiography of the movement with philosophical sophistication and with an eye toward keeping emancipatory possibilities alive. He refuses the comfort of romance, rejects the conclusions of pessimism, and embraces the tragic as a way of telling a richly textured story about this extraordinary moment in history. In every sense of the phrase, this book is a tour de force!
-- Eddie S. Glaude Jr., author of We Are the Leaders We Have Been Looking For
A major achievement. Through a deeply engaging and necessary critique of Civil Rights paradigms that represent the contemporary orthodoxy in academic discourse, Brandon Terry forwards a bracing reconsideration of Black political thought itself. Terry’s debut book as a solo author promises to transform how we will think about the Civil Rights Movement over the course of the next generation.
-- Peniel E. Joseph, author of The Third Reconstruction
Brandon Terry’s magisterial study of the example of the Civil Rights Movement is a field-defining intervention. With remarkable beauty and clarity, Terry reveals the ethical, philosophical, and political stakes of the genres through which we narrate the most consequential episodes of twentieth-century American history.
-- Adom Getachew, author of Worldmaking after Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination
Brandon Terry gives us a masterful account of how the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s serves as a touchstone for competing visions of race, political possibility, and human agency. Was it, as the dominant narrative assumes, a redemptive episode in Americaʾs unfinished journey toward racial equality? Or was it, as revisionist critics suggest, a moment of false hope in the face of persistent, unalterable racial subordination? Terry offers a compelling critique of both accounts, arguing instead for a chastened, tragic, but ultimately hopeful vision of political action and spiritual striving. Ranging impressively across philosophy, history, and Black political thought, this brilliant work shows how contested interpretations of the past shape political argument in the here and now.
-- Michael J. Sandel, author of Democracyʾs Discontent: A New Edition for Our Perilous Times
Brandon Terry is one of the very few great intellectuals of his generation. His long-awaited book is an instant classic that provides in a profound and poignant manner a glimpse of costly hope in our bleak times. His philosophical erudition, historical scholarship, and deep moral grounding in the Black freedom struggle put a smile on the faces of W. E. B. Du Bois, Toni Morrison, and Martin Luther King, Jr.!
-- Cornel West