Malcolm X (1925-1965)
Contributing Editor: Keith D. Miller
Classroom Issues and Strategies
Malcolm X is one of the most controversial figures one could study.
Most students, recognizing his enormous impact on recent American culture,
will revel in discussions--or passionate debates--about his merits. Those
who have read the popular
Autobiography of Malcolm X --or seen the
Spike Lee movie based on it--will argue that Malcolm X was foolish to be
duped by Elijah Muhammed or brilliant to recognize that he had been duped;
that Malcolm X reached a beautiful, universal vision at the end of his
life or that he did not; that he was unforgivably sexist or that his sexism
was typical of the period.
Students will invariably attempt to relate Malcolm X to the 1991 racial
uprising in Los Angeles and to other issues in race relations, including
those on their own campuses.
The first need is to direct the students, at the very least initially,
to focus on "The Ballot or the Bullet" instead of jumping to
an ultimate verdict on the
Autobiography, on Malcolm X, or even
on race relations in America.
Major Themes, Historical Perspectives, and Personal Issues
Malcolm X used the same major rhetorical strategy in "The Ballot
or the Bullet" that he employed in other speeches and in the
Autobiography.
He attacked the well-established, sometimes unexamined tendency of African-Americans
to identify with white America, passionately insisting that blacks identify
instead with Africans, with their slave ancestors, and with each other.
In that vein, he declares, "No, I'm not an American. I'm one of the
twenty-two million black people who are victims of Americanism." Speaking
to American blacks, he explains, "You're nothing but Africans. Nothing
but Africans."
The use of "X" as a replacement for a given last name is part
of this rhetorical strategy. Malcolm X urged all African-Americans to reject
their last names, which were those of slave-owners, replacing them with
"X" to stand for the lost African names of their ancestors. Thousands
belonging to the Nation of Islam adopted this practice. Because the "X"
substituted for last names, it defined members of the Nation as a single
"family" of brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles. The use of
"X" also bracketed the names of other African-Americans, implicitly
declaring that all of them were mistakenly identifying with whites, their
slave masters.
The issue of violence loomed large in Malcolm X's rhetoric. In this
speech and elsewhere, he refused to repudiate violence, realizing that
most of the white Americans who applauded
King's
nonviolence would not react nonviolently themselves in the face of brutality.
By refusing to embrace nonviolence, Malcolm X made King look more moderate
and more palatable than he would otherwise have appeared.
By the time of "The Ballot or the Bullet," race dominated
America's domestic agenda. Millions watched police dogs tear into young
African-American children protesting for integration in Birmingham. Presidents
Kennedy and Johnson responded by proposing major civil rights legislation,
which passed in the summer following "The Ballot or the Bullet."
Though many believed that such an initiative signified racial progress,
Malcolm X disagreed. Not only did conservative whites fail blacks, he maintained,
so did "all these white liberals" who were supposedly allies.
As he explains in this speech, many white liberals belonged to the Democratic
party, which was often dominated by southern segregationists. Unlike white
liberals and the NAACP, Malcolm X did not want blacks to integrate white
hotels. He wanted blacks to own the hotels.
Malcolm X's own bleak childhood and criminal young adulthood helped
shape his radical views and gave him insight into the lives of his primary
audience--hundreds of thousands of African-Americans trapped in the ghettos
of America's largest cities.
Significant Form, Style, or Artistic Conventions
Malcolm X's jeremiads owe something to the appeals of Marcus Garvey,
an earlier leader who instilled racial pride, and to Malcolm X's own father,
a Garvey disciple. Even though Malcolm X advocated Islam instead of Christianity,
his style and impact derive in part from the role of the black Protestant
preacher--a revered patriarchal figure free to denounce from the pulpit
whomever he saw fit.
Original Audience
Malcolm X delivered "The Ballot or the Bullet" to a predominantly
African-American meeting in Cleveland of the Congress of Racial Equality
(CORE), which was shifting from nonviolent protest to Malcolm X-like black
nationalism. Helping provoke this shift were speeches like this one, which
was received enthusiastically.
Students can compare this talk to those that Malcolm X gave to largely
white listeners. See, for example, the addresses collected in
Malcolm
X Speaks at Harvard (1991), edited by Archie Epps.
Comparisons, Contrasts, Connections
Comparing the language of
King
and Malcolm X can be helpful. In some ways their analyses of the evils
institutionalized in American life are quite similar. Though Malcolm X's
blowtorch denunciations are harsher than King's, the main difference lies
in King's willingness to grant whites a way around the guilt that King
so skillfully evoked. In King's rhetorical world, whites-- even ardent
segregationists--could listen, change their ways, and learn to practice
love and democracy. King claimed that his methods could actually win opponents
over to his view.
During most of his career Malcolm X gave whites no such break. Instead
he demanded separation from whites. He regarded integration not as a goal,
but as a sentimental fiction. Toward the end of his life, he seemed more
accepting of some whites, but his evolving vision was not entirely clear.
As James Cone explains, toward the end of their lives, King and Malcolm
X were, in some ways, thinking alike. Both realized that, without economic
muscle, masses of blacks would never prosper, no matter how much this nation
espoused the theory of integration. In "I've Been to the Mountaintop,"
King stressed the need for economic self-help and racial solidarity. For
both leaders, the divisions of economic class loomed as important as--and
were inseparable from--the issue of race.
Questions for Reading and Discussion/ Approaches to Writing
Who is Malcolm X's primary audience? If it is primarily African-Americans,
why did he address whites as well and the white news media? Why did he
(co)author a best-seller often read by and, in some ways, aimed at whites?
Why did he criticize whites in such an uncompromising fashion instead of
flattering his audience as speakers usually do? Why did he define grounds
of disagreement with whites instead of grounds of agreement, which orators
usually seek and are taught to seek? Why did he also often criticize blacks
who heard him--sometimes calling them "brainwashed"--and why
did they applaud him when he did so?
If Malcolm X was sincere in rejecting nonviolence, why did he characteristically
refuse to carry a gun and always, in fact, practice nonviolence? If blacks
were brutally oppressed, as he claimed, and if retaliation was justified,
as he claimed, why did he never lead such retaliation? Since he gave fiery
speeches but never organized either nonviolent or violent protests against
whites, was he sincere? Or was he a "paper tiger"? Did he mean
to be taken literally? If not, how did he mean to be taken?
Bibliography
Millions continue to read the
Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965),
co-authored by Alex Haley. I strongly recommend
Remembering Malcolm
(1992) by Malcolm X's assistant minister Benjamin Karim, who shows a sensitive
leader inside the Muslim mosque and reveals information available nowhere
else.
No thoroughly reliable, full-scale biography of Malcolm X exists. Many
details about his life (especially before his public career) remain unknown.
In
Malcolm (1991), a detailed, provocative biography, Bruce Perry
claimed that the
Autobiography features blatant exaggerations and
outright falsehoods. But some of Perry's own claims seem unsupportable.
Joe Wood compiled
Malcolm X: In Our Own Image (1992), which contains
helpful essays by Cornel West, Arnold Rampersad, John Edgar Wideman, Patricia
Hill Collins, and others. In
Martin and Malcolm and America (1991),
James Cone usefully compares and contrasts King and Malcolm X, as do John
Lucaites and Celeste Condit in "Reconstructing Equality: Culturetypal
and Counter-Cultural Rhetorics in the Martyred Black Vision."
Communication
Monographs 57 (1990): 5-24.