Contents
Foreword by Herb Boyd
Preface
Part 1. Malcolm as a Theoretical Framework
Malcolm X from Michigan: Race, Identity, and Community across the Black World, Rita Kiki Edozie with Curtis Stokes
The Paradigmatic Agency of Malcolm X: Family, Experience, and Thought, Abdul Alkalimat
Reeducating the Afro-American: Malcolm X’s Scholarly and Historical Pedagogy, Lenwood G. Davis
Malcolm X: Master of Signifyin, Geneva Smitherman
If You Can’t Be Free, Be Indignant: The Womanist Legacy of Malcolm X, Sheila Radford-Hill
Malcolm-esque: A Black Arts Literary Genre, Joseph McLaren
Part 2. Malcolm and Community Engagement
Malcolm X’s Pre–Nation of Islam (NOI) Discourses: Sourced from Detroit’s Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History Archives, Charles Ezra Ferrell
Liberation and Transformation through Education: Black Studies at Malcolm X College, Chicago, Edward C. Davis IV
Malcolm X: An Education of Positive Youth Development Challenged by Street Culture, Carl S. Taylor, Pamela R. Smith, and Cameron “Khalfani” Herman
A Detroit Black Panther’s Soldiering Journey with Malcolm X: Extract Memoirs from an X Heir, Ahmad A. Rahman
Malcolm X and the Black Campus Movement: Shaping Academic Communities, Ibram X. Kendi
Part 3. Malcolm and Black World Struggle
Malcolm X, Islam, and the Black Self, Zain Abdullah
Malcolm X and the Struggle for Socialism in the United States, Curtis Stokes
Malcolm X, Black Cultural Revolution, and the Shrine of the Black Madonna in Detroit, Errol A. Henderson
Malcolm X and the Cuban Revolution, Ollie Johnson
Malcolm Omowale X (Re)Turns to Africa: Pan-Africanism and the Black Studies Agenda in a Global Era, Rita Kiki Edozie
Works by Malcolm X
Contributors
Index