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The Black History of the White House
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Lusane is on the rolodex of A-list media and has been interviewed by Forbes, The Guardian, CBS News, NPR, PBS, C-SPAN, and BET. TV: Oprah, Tavis Smiley, Bill Moyers, Charlie Rose, The Colbert Report, CSPAN: Book TV; MSNBC, CSPAN Book Notes Radio: Fresh Air, Democracy Now, Air America programs, NPR: All Things Considered, Talk of the Nation, Alternative Radio, Pacifica Network stations, Community & NPR affiliate radio stations around the country, New Dimensions, XM: Bob Edwards Show, Between the Lines, Al Sharpton Show, Michael Baisden Show, Make it Plain with Mark Thompson, Tom Joyner Morning Show Print: O Magazine, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, Philadelphia Inquierer, NY Review of Books, Colorlines, The Nation, The Progressive, Z Magazine, The Tennessean, Christian Science Monitor, In These Times, Mother Jones, Atlantic Monthly, Toronto Globe & Mail, Oregonian, Pulse, Utne Reader, Ode Magazine, Village Voice, SF Bay Guardian, Black Scholar, Vibe, Jet, Essence, American Legacy, Ebony, Black Issues Book Review Web: Vibe, Alternet, Huffingtonpost, CommonDreams, Counterpunch, Z-net, NY Times Book Blog, Bookslut, Elegant Variation, Identity Theory/Morning News, Complete Review, Shelf Awareness, DailyKos, TomDispatch, truthdig, leftbooks.com, essential.org, Ta-Nehisi Coates(atlantic blog), lolacreative blog, BeyondChron, NewBlackMan blog, The Root, Black Voices Book clubs: Working Assets Academic Marketing: African American history

Reviews

"The historical patterns elucidated within Lusane's work will have a profound impact on the perceptions of social work students (BSW and MSW). Concepts of race relationships will be altered. In addition, I found that the biographical sketches are reminiscent of Kennedy's Profiles in Courage...The book will be a great asset to the intellectual and emotional development of social work students."--Journal of Social Work Values & Ethics "Dr. Clarence Lusane, program director for Comparative and Regional Studies at American University, painted an interesting link between African Americans and the White House dating all the way back to its construction. Throughout the course of his research, Dr. Lusane found that slave labor was used in the construction of the White House and other buildings in Washington, D.C. His book, The Black History of the White House, will certainly be a lesson to us all."--Amber Gray, The Bulletin, Vol. 23, No. 3 "The Obamas were the first African American first family, but not the first residents. This thoroughly researched and gripping book shares the untold stories of some of the people who were enslaved by U.S. presidents, including stories of resistance and escape. Lusane describes the myriad ways that the White House and the lives of African Americans have been intertwined throughout U.S. history. This is the only book to document this essential story in our country's history."--Rethinking Schools "Clarence Lusane's Black History of the White House came out late last year and flew under the radar at most of the major book reviews. But Lusane is an elegant, impassioned writer, and the book--which is full of stories we'd never encountered in American History 101--is totally engrossing. Lusane starts off in the 18th century, working his way up to Barack Obama's White House. Presidents Washington, Madison, and Roosevelt (the first) come in for especially close examination, but you'll also read about 'Blind Tom' Wiggins (an autistic savant who was the first African-American to give a professional performance at the White House), James Benjamin Parker (an extremely large man who became a national hero after helping to subdue President McKinley's assassin), and other figures who are more or less ignored by conventional historians. This is a serious, necessary book, but not a humorless one, and one of our favorite sections involves the forgotten campaign to draft Dizzy Gillespie to run against Lyndon Johnson in 1964: 'Rather than "secretaries" he would have "ministers,"' Lusane writes, 'including Max Roach as Minister of Defense, bassist Charles Mingus as Minister of Peace, Malcolm X as Attorney General, composer Duke Ellington as Ambassador to the Vatican, Louis Armstrong as Minister of Agriculture, and singer Ray Charles would be in charge of the Library of Congress. Other positions were to go to Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, Carmen McRae, Woody Herman, and Count Basie.'"--The Observer's "Very Short List" "The author concludes from his research that there is little doubt the first African American in the White House was a slave. In fact, 25 percent of our presidents were slaveholders. And between the time of slavery and now--with our nation's first black president--there is a long and storied history of blacks in the White House, from servants to lobbyists to Secret Service agents, reporters, activists, officials and more."--Chicago Sun Times "The Black History of the White House features stories of those who were forced to work on the construction of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. and the White House slaves and servants who went on to write books. Readers hear from the Secret Service agents who were harassed by their peers to the Washington insiders who rose to the highest levels of power and behind-the-scenes with Black artists and intellectuals invited to the White House. 'This book focuses on the historic relationship/contradiction between the declaration of freedom and equality by the nation's founders--and as embodied in the president and the presidency--and the systematic and state-sanctioned discrimination against African Americans and other people of color in the United States,' explained Lusane. 'The White House, as symbol and substance, is the prism through which the long history of Black marginalization is viewed. This book argues that while Barack Obama's election is a milestone, it does not undo the historic or contemporary racial barriers that have always defined the nation, and that contentions that we are now in a post-racial America are false. It further argues that many U.S. Presidents, including those under which major racial progress occurred (Lincoln, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson), have been complicit in Black marginalization, and that Obama will have to overcome the institution of the presidency if he is to achieve real progress in the area of race relations.'"--The Philadelphia Tribune "Those who think they know their presidents may be in for surprises in Clarence Lusane's fascinating social history that begins: 'More than one in four U.S. presidents were involved in human trafficking and slavery. These presidents bought, sold, bred and enslaved black people for profit. Of the 12 presidents who were enslavers, more than half kept people in bondage at the White House.' Lusane, an American University professor, weaves in stories of people like Paul Jennings, born into slavery on James Madison's farm, who at 10 was a White House footman and in 1865 wrote the first White House memoir, A Colored Man's Reminiscences of James Madison."--USA Today "In eloquent language, Lusane shows how the African American experience helped shape a series of presidential administrations and governmental policies."--Sacramento Bee "Despite the racial progress represented by the election of the first black president of the U.S., the nation's capital has a very complicated and often unflattering racial history. Lusane traces the racial history of the White House from George Washington to Barack Obama."--Booklist "Slaves have toiled in the White House; 25 percent of our Presidents were slaveholders. Lusane reminds readers of the place of the President's house, from its very construction onward, in African American history, a tale all-too rarely told."--Library Journal "...carefully documents the travails of a polity in which African-Americans were so essential and prevalent, but that struggled endlessly to maintain, then dismantle, the institution of slavery...A lively, opinionated survey, telling a story that the textbooks too often overlook."--Kirkus Reviews

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