Out Of America: A Black Man Confronts Africa

Out Of America: A Black Man Confronts Africa

by Keith B Richburg
Out Of America: A Black Man Confronts Africa

Out Of America: A Black Man Confronts Africa

by Keith B Richburg

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

Keith B. Richburg was an experienced and respected reporter who had paid his dues covering urban neighborhoods in Washington D.C., and won praise for his coverage of Southeast Asia. But nothing prepared him for the personal odyssey that he would embark upon when he was assigned to cover Africa. In this powerful book, Richburg takes the reader on an extraordinary journey that sweeps from Somalia to Rwanda to Zaire and finally to South Africa. He shows how he came to terms with the divide within himself: between his African racial heritage and his American cultural identity. Are these really my people? Am I truly an African-American? The answer, Richburg finds, after much soul-searching, is that no, he is not an African, but an American first and foremost. To those who romanticize Mother Africa as a black Valhalla, where blacks can walk with dignity and pride, he regrets that this is not the reality. He has been there and witnessed the killings, the repression, the false promises, and the horror. "Thank God my nameless ancestor, brought across the ocean in chains and leg irons, made it out alive," he concludes. "Thank God I am an American."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780465001880
Publisher: Basic Books
Publication date: 09/22/2009
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 288
Sales rank: 552,235
Product dimensions: 5.54(w) x 8.24(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

Keith B. Richburg is the New York bureau chief for the Washington Post. In 1993 he won the National Association of Black Journalists' International Reporting Award, and the following year he won the George Polk Memorial Award for foreign reporting and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He lives in Washington, D.C.

What People are Saying About This

Joshua Hammer

"Eloquent . . . an important and original book"

Shelby Steele

"Black America has always imagined Africa like the adopted child imagines the birth parent. The dream is that Africa holds a truth for us. Keith Richburg marches through that dream and finds that he was an American all along."

Brian W. Jones

"Striking in both its honesty and horror...A passionate reminder to a multiethnic democracy that human dignity, not banal notions of cultural identity, is the source of enduring civic and personal esteem."

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