William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was born in 1868 in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. A brilliant student and natural leader, he experienced little prejudice during his early years; it was while attending Fisk, a Southern university for Negroes, that the young Du Bois first fully awoke to the realities of race in America. His response was to make the cause of the black people his own. After graduation from Fisk, he earned his Ph.D. from Harvard, studied in Berlin, and became one of the great pioneer sociologists. In 1903, The Souls of Black Folk appeared. This prophetic masterpiece was but the beginning of a long, often lonely crusade that saw Du Bois forced into an increasingly radical position in his search for a solution to the American racial dilemma. His final years were marked by disillusionment with his native land, renunciation of his citizenship, and final self-exile in Ghana, where he died in 1963, while working on an Encyclopedia Africana. Randall Kenan is the author of the critically acclaimed collection of stories Let the Dead Bury their Dead (a New York Times Notable book) and the novel A Visitation of Spirits, as well as a number of works of nonfiction. Among his many awards and honors are a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Whiting Writers Award, and the North Carolina Award for Literature. He is Associate Professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes is the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of African American Studies and sociology and the director of the African American Studies Program at Colby College in Waterville, Maine. She is also an assistant pastor for special projects at the Union Baptist Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She holds degrees in sociology from Northeastern University (B.A., M.A., Ph.D.) and has pursued graduate theological study at Boston University.
One hundred years after publication, there is in the entire body of social criticism still no more than a handful of meditations on the promise and failings of democracy in America to rival William Edward Burghardt Du Bois's extraordinary collection of fourteen essays. --from the Introduction by David Levering Lewis One hundred years after publication, there is in the entire body of social criticism still no more than a handful of meditations on the promise and failings of democracy in America to rival William Edward Burghardt Du Bois s extraordinary collection of fourteen essays. from the Introduction by David Levering Lewis .