W.E.B. DuBois
I.Introduction
Du Bois, W. E. B. (1868-1963), black American historian and sociologist,
who conducted the initial research on the black experience in the United
States. His work paved the way for the civil rights, Pan-African, and
Black Power movements in the United States.
II. Early Life
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was born in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.
A descendant of African American, French, and Dutch ancestors, he demonstrated
his intellectual gifts at an early age. He graduated from high school
at age 16, the valedictorian and only black in his graduating class of
12. He was orphaned shortly after his graduation and was forced to fund
his own college education. He won a scholarship to Fisk University in
Nashville, Tennessee, where he excelled and saw for the first time the
plight of Southern blacks.
Du Bois had grown up with more privileges and advantages than most blacks
living in the United States at that time, and, unlike most blacks living
in the South, he had suffered neither severe economic hardship nor repeated
encounters with blatant racism. As violence against blacks increased in
the South throughout the 1880s, Du Bois's scholarly education was matched
by the hard lessons he learned about race relations. He followed reports
about the increasing frequency of lynchings, calling each racially motivated
killing a scar upon his soul. Through these and other encounters
with racial hatred, as well as through his experience teaching in poor
black communities in rural Tennessee during the summers, Du Bois began
to develop his racial consciousness and the desire to help improve conditions
for all blacks.
Du Bois received his bachelor's degree from Fisk in 1888, and won a scholarship
to attend Harvard University. Harvard considered his high school education
and Fisk degree inadequate preparation for a master's program, and he
had to register as an undergraduate. Du Bois received his second bachelor's
degree in 1890 and then enrolled in Harvard's graduate school. He earned
his master's degree and then his doctoral degree in 1895, becoming the
first black to receive that degree from Harvard.
III. Research on the Black Experience
By that time, Du Bois had begun his research into the historical and
sociological conditions of black Americans that would make him the most
influential black intellectual of his time. His doctoral dissertation,
The Suppression of the African Slave-Trade to the United States of America,
1638-1870, was published in 1896 as the initial volume in the Harvard
Historical Studies Series. After teaching for several years at Wilberforce
University in Ohio, Du Bois conducted an exhaustive study of the social
and economic conditions of urban blacks in Philadelphia in 1896 and 1897.
The results were published in The Philadelphia Negro (1899), the first
sociological text on a black community published in the United States.
After he became a professor of economics and history at Atlanta University
in 1897, he initiated a series of studies as head of the school's Negro
Problem program. These works had a profound impact on the study
of the history and sociology of blacks living in the United States.
In 1897 Du Bois made a famous statement on the ambiguity of the black
identity: One feels his two-nessan American, a Negro, two
souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings, two warring ideals in
one dark body. He advanced these views even further in The Souls
of Black Folk (1903), a powerful collection of essays in which he described
some of the key themes of the black experience, especially the efforts
of black Americans to reconcile their African heritage with their pride
in being U.S. citizens.
With The Souls of Black Folk, Du Bois had begun to challenge the leadership
of Booker T. Washington, a fellow educator who was then the most influential
and admired black in the United States. Du Bois objected to Washington's
strategy of accommodation and compromise with whites in both politics
and education. Du Bois perceived this strategy as accepting the denial
of black citizenship rights. He also criticized Washington's emphasis
on the importance of industrial education for blacks, which Du Bois felt
came at the expense of higher education in the arts and humanities.
Du Bois also challenged Washington's leadership through the Niagara Movement,
which Du Bois helped to convene in 1905. The movement grew out of a meeting
of 29 black leaders who gathered to discuss segregation and black political
rights. They met in Canada after being denied hotel accommodations on
the U.S. side of Niagara Falls and drafted a list of demands. These included
equality of economic and educational opportunity for blacks, an end to
segregation, and the prohibition of discrimination in courts, public facilities,
and trade unions.
IV. NAACP
Although the Niagara Movement had little immediate impact on political
or popular opinion, it was influential in the formation of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). A group of
black and white intellectuals opposed to the nonconfrontational tactics
of Booker T. Washington met in New York City on Abraham Lincoln's birthday
(February 12) in 1909 to discuss the formation of a new organization dedicated
to improving conditions for blacks in the United States. The resulting
group, the NAACP, was overwhelmingly white, but elected Du Bois as one
of its founding officers in 1910.
Du Bois was hired to head the NAACP's publicity and research efforts.
He was also named editor of the NAACP's magazine, The Crisis, which soon
became the most important national voice for the advancement of black
civil rights, largely through Du Bois's reporting and editorials. His
writings on lynchings in the South, his positions on why blacks should
support the U.S. war effort during World War I (1914-1918), and his criticisms
of Marcus Garvey, the black separatist who led the Back to Africa
movement, were all broadly influential.
Du Bois resigned from the NAACP staff in 1934 because he was unwilling
to advocate racial integration in all aspects of life, a position adopted
by the NAACP. Du Bois had argued that blacks should join together, apart
from whites, to start businesses and industries that would allow blacks
to advance themselves economically. He returned to Atlanta University,
where he taught, wrote books, and founded a new journal, called Phylon.
During these years he published two important books, Black Reconstruction
(1935), a Marxist interpretation of the post-Civil War era in the South;
and Dusk of Dawn (1940), an autobiography. Following extended conflicts
with university officials, he was forced to retire from Atlanta University
in 1944.
V. International Activities
Throughout his adult life, Du Bois maintained a keen cultural and political
interest in Africa. He attended meetings with Africans in London in 1900
and 1911, and beginning in 1919 he helped to organize Pan-African congresses
to nurture worldwide unity among people of African descent. He attended
Pan-African congresses in 1921, 1923, 1927, and 1945, by which time international
leaders opposed to colonialism were calling him the father of Pan-Africanism.
Du Bois returned to the NAACP in 1944 to head its research efforts, but
was dismissed in 1948 after a dispute with the NAACP's executive director,
in which Du Bois accused the director of selling out the cause of black
civil rights for his own political advancement.
VI. Peace Activist
After World War II (1939-1945), Du Bois became increasingly involved
in promoting world peace and nuclear disarmament. In 1950 he became chairman
of the Peace Information Center in New York City, a group whose stated
objective was to gather signatures in the United States for a global petition
to ban the use of nuclear weapons. In July of that year, after the organization
had gathered more than one million U.S. signatures, the Peace Center was
labeled a Communist-front organization by U.S. Secretary of State Dean
Acheson.
In August 1950, the U.S. Justice Department requested that the Peace
Center register as the agent of a foreign government. The centers' board
members refused, and in January 1951 Du Bois was charged as an agent of
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Du Bois had joined the
Socialist Party for a short time in 1911 and had supported many of its
positions over the years, but he was not a member of either the Socialist
Party or the Communist Party at the time. He was acquitted after a highly
publicized trial, but the experience left him embittered and did not end
his battles with the U.S. government. After the trial, Du Bois was repeatedly
denied passports to travel outside the United States and was harassed
for much of the decade by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the
police, and a variety of government agencies.
In 1958 the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the State Department
could not demand the signing of loyalty oaths as a basis for issuing passports,
and Du Bois was granted a passport. He then traveled in the USSR, where
he met with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, and visited Communist China,
a country that was on the State Department's banned list. Immediately
upon his return to the United States in 1959, Du Bois's passport was revoked.
He was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize that same year.
VII. Later Years
In 1961 Du Bois moved to the newly independent West African nation of
Ghana. In an act of defiance just before his departure, he joined the
American Communist Party. Once in Ghana, he began work on the Encyclopedia
Africana, a reference work on Africans and people of African descent throughout
the world. When his passport expired in 1963 he applied to have it renewed,
but it was denied by the U.S. government because he was a registered Communist.
He renounced his U.S. citizenship and became a citizen of Ghana in February
of that year, shortly before his 95th birthday. Ghanian President Kwame
Nkrumah welcomed Du Bois's decision and deemed him the first citizen
of Africa. Du Bois died a few months later.
Du Bois wrote some 20 books during his lifetime. In addition to the previously
mentioned titles, he wrote AfricaIts Place in Modern History (1930);
Black Reconstruction in the South (1935); Black Folk Then and Now (1939);
a trilogy, called Black Flame, which included The Ordeal of Mansart (1957),
Mansart Builds a School (1959), and Worlds of Color (1961); and, published
posthumously, his third and last autobiography, The Autobiography of W.E.B.
Du Bois (1968).
Contributed By:
Robert J. Norrell, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
Bernadotte Schmitt Chair of Excellence and Professor of History, University
of Tennessee. Author of Reaping the Whirlwind: The Civil Rights Movement
in Tuskegee and The Making of Modern Alabama: State History and Geography.
HOW TO CITE THIS ARTICLE
"Du Bois, W. E. B.," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2001
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