A landmark reevaluation that uncovers how a maligned African American leader hid his radicalism beneath a mask of moderation
One of the most important but reviled figures in American history, Booker T. Washington (1856-1915) has long been accused of trading the rights of African Americans for menial gains and personal power. Dark Virtues offers a fundamental reinterpretation of Washington's life and thought by drawing on a massive archive of his writings and other documents. Desmond Jagmohan argues that Washington practiced a deliberate politics of deception, wearing a compliant mask to conceal and enable his radical projects to uproot Jim Crow and improve the condition of black southerners.
In the Jim Crow South, Washington confronted a racial tyranny maintained through disenfranchisement, segregation, economic subjugation, and terrorism. Judging that open confrontation would be fatal for black southerners, he saw strategic equivocation, concealment, and deception as political virtues for the oppressed. Reexamining his rhetoric, writings, and actions, Dark Virtues reveals this unseen and subversive Washington, a leader who clandestinely fought for racial justice and economic empowerment, used his Tuskegee Institute to build black civic capacity under the cover of vocational training, and willingly bore the stain of treachery to protect black southerners from racial terror. This radical Washington stands in stark contrast to W.E.B. Du Bois's damning and influential depiction of him as a mere accommodationist.
But Dark Virtues doesn't rehabilitate Washington uncritically. It shows that his realism was tragic: politically necessary and morally regrettable. It also asks hard questions about politics and ethics in dark times: Does anyone survive oppression morally unscathed? What does resistance look like when protest can cost people their jobs-or even their lives?