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Cornel West

Cornel Ronald West (born June 2, 1953) is an American philosopher, theologian, political activist, social critic, actor, and public intellectual.[13][14] The grandson of a Baptist minister, West's primary philosophy focuses on the roles of race, gender, and class struggle in American society. A socialist,[15][16] West draws intellectual contributions from multiple traditions, including Christianity, the black church, democratic socialism, left-wing populism, neopragmatism, and transcendentalism.[17][18][19][20] Among his most influential books are Race Matters (1993) and Democracy Matters (2004).

For the residential section of Cornell University, see Cornell West Campus.

Cornel West

Cornel Ronald West

(1953-06-02) June 2, 1953

Independent (since 2023)[5]
Justice For All Party (since 2024)[a]

Hilda Holloman
(m. 1977, divorced)
[11]
Ramona Santiago
(m. 1981; div. 1986)
[12]
Elleni Gebre Amlak
(m. 1992, divorced)
Leslie Kotkin
(m. 2015; div. 2018)
Annahita Mahdavi
(m. 2021)

West is an outspoken voice in left-wing politics in the United States. During his career, he has held professorships and fellowships at Harvard University, Yale University, Union Theological Seminary, Princeton University, Dartmouth College, Pepperdine University, and the University of Paris.[21] He is a frequent commentator on politics and social questions in many media outlets.[22]


From 2010 through 2013, West co-hosted the radio program Smiley and West with Tavis Smiley.[23][24] He has been featured in several documentaries, and made appearances in Hollywood films such as The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions, as well as providing commentary for both films. West has also made several spoken word and hip hop albums, and due to this work, has been named MTV's Artist of the Week.[25] West co-hosted a podcast entitled The Tight Rope, with Tricia Rose. He is a frequent conversation partner with his friend Robert P. George, a prominent conservative intellectual, with the two often speaking together at colleges and universities on the meaning of liberal arts education, free speech, and civil dialogue.[26][27] In 2020, he was listed by Prospect magazine as the fourth-greatest thinker for the COVID-19 era.[28]


West is a third party candidate in the 2024 presidential election. After declaring his run with the People's Party in June 2023, he shortly thereafter announced he also was seeking the nomination of the Green Party.[6][7] In October 2023, he announced he was again switching his affiliation, and is running as an independent candidate.[29]

Early life and education[edit]

West was born on June 2, 1953, in Tulsa, Oklahoma,[30] and grew up in Sacramento, California, where he graduated from John F. Kennedy High School. His mother, Irene Rayshell (Bias), was a teacher and principal. His father, Clifton Louis West Jr., was a general contractor for the U.S. Department of Defense.[31] His grandfather Clifton L. West Sr. was pastor of the Tulsa Metropolitan Baptist Church.[32] Irene B. West Elementary School in Elk Grove, California, is named after his mother.[33]


As a teen, West marched in civil rights demonstrations and organized protests demanding black studies courses at his high school, where he was the student body president. He later wrote that, in his youth, he admired "the sincere black militancy of Malcolm X, the defiant rage of the Black Panther Party, and the livid black theology of James Cone".[34]


In 1970, after graduation from high school, he enrolled at Harvard College and took classes taught by the philosophers Robert Nozick and Stanley Cavell. In 1973, West was graduated from Harvard magna cum laude in Near Eastern languages and civilization.[35] He credits Harvard with exposing him to a broader range of ideas and that he was influenced by his professors as well as the Black Panther Party (BPP). West says his Christianity prevented him from joining the BPP, instead choosing to work in local breakfast, prison, and church programs.[36] After completing his undergraduate work at Harvard, West enrolled at Princeton University, where he received Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degrees in 1980, completing a dissertation under the supervision of Raymond Geuss and Sheldon Wolin.[3] He became the first African American to graduate from Princeton with a PhD degree in philosophy.[37]


At Princeton, West was heavily influenced by the neopragmatism of Richard Rorty.[38] Rorty remained a close friend and colleague of West's for many years following West's graduation. The title of West's dissertation was Ethics, Historicism, and the Marxist Tradition,[39] which was later revised and published under the title The Ethical Dimensions of Marxist Thought.[38]

Career[edit]

Academic appointments[edit]

In his late 20s, he returned to Harvard as a W. E. B. Du Bois Fellow before becoming an assistant professor at Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York. In 1984, he went to Yale Divinity School in what eventually became a joint appointment in American studies. While at Yale, he participated in campus protests for a clerical labor union and divestment from apartheid South Africa. One of the protests resulted in his being arrested and jailed. As punishment, the university administration canceled his leave for the spring term in 1987, leading him to commute from Yale in New Haven, Connecticut, where he was teaching two classes, across the Atlantic Ocean to the University of Paris.[18]


He then returned to Union Theological Seminary for one year before going to Princeton to become a professor of religion and director of the program in African American Studies from 1988 to 1994.[18] After Princeton, he accepted an appointment as professor of African American studies at Harvard University, with a joint appointment at the Harvard Divinity School.[40] West taught one of the university's most popular courses, an introductory class on African American studies.[41] In 1998, he was appointed the first Alphonse Fletcher University Professor.[42] West used this new position to teach in not only African American studies, but also courses in divinity, religion, and philosophy.[40] West was also inducted into Omicron Delta Kappa in 1998 at SUNY Plattsburgh.


West left Harvard after a widely publicized 2002 dispute with the university's president, Lawrence Summers.[43][44] That year, West returned to Princeton, where he helped found the Center for African American studies in 2006. In 2012, West left Princeton and returned to the institution where he began his teaching career, Union Theological Seminary.[45] His departure from Princeton was quite amicable. He continued to teach occasional courses at Princeton in an emeritus capacity as the Class of 1943 University Professor in the Center for African American Studies.[46]


West returned to Harvard in November 2016, leaving Union Theological Seminary for a nontenured position as Professor of the Practice of Public Philosophy. He was appointed jointly at the Harvard Divinity School and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Department of African and African American Studies.[47][48][49]


In February 2021, reports circulated that West was denied consideration for tenure at Harvard and that he had threatened to leave the university again.[50] On March 8, 2021, West announced that he would leave Harvard and move to the Union Theological Seminary in Manhattan.[51][52][53] He submitted a resignation letter to Harvard on June 30, 2021.[54] West implied that the decision to deny him tenure was retaliation for his critical stance on Israel and the Palestinian cause. West wrote:

Dispute with Lawrence Summers[edit]

In 2000, economist and former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers became president of Harvard. Soon after, Summers held a private meeting with West, in which he reportedly rebuked West for missing too many classes, contributing to grade inflation, neglecting serious scholarship, and spending too much time on his financially profitable projects.[78] Summers reportedly suggested that West produce an academic book befitting his professorial position, as his recent output had consisted primarily of co-written and edited volumes. According to some reports, Summers also objected to West's production of a CD, the critically panned Sketches of My Culture, and to his political campaigning, including spending an alleged three weeks to promote Bill Bradley's 2000 presidential campaign.[79] West contended he had missed only one class during his time at Harvard "in order to give a keynote address at a Harvard-sponsored conference on AIDS". Summers also allegedly suggested that since West held the rank of Harvard University Professor and thus reported directly to the president, he should meet with Summers regularly to discuss the progress of his academic production.[80]


Summers refused to comment on the details of his conversation with West, except to express hope that West would remain at Harvard. Soon after, West was hospitalized for prostate cancer. West noted that Summers failed to send him get-well wishes until weeks after his surgery, whereas newly installed Princeton president Shirley Tilghman had contacted him frequently before and after his treatment.[80] In 2002, West left Harvard University to return to Princeton. West lashed out at Summers in public interviews, calling him "the Ariel Sharon of higher education" on the NPR program The Tavis Smiley Show.[81] In response to these remarks, five Princeton faculty members, led by professor of molecular biology Jacques Robert Fresco, said they looked with "strong disfavor upon his characterization" of Summers and that "such an analogy carries innuendoes and implications ... that many on the Princeton faculty find highly inappropriate, indeed repugnant and intolerable".[82] Harvard's undergraduate student newspaper, The Harvard Crimson, suggested in October 2002 that the premise of the Law and Order: Criminal Intent episode "Anti-Thesis" was based on West's conflicts with Summers.[83]

"Black Theology and Marxist Thought" (1979) – essay

Prophesy Deliverance! An Afro-American Revolutionary Christianity (1982)

Post-Analytic Philosophy, edited with John Rajchman (1985)

Prophetic Fragments (1988)

The American Evasion of Philosophy: A Genealogy of Pragmatism (1989)

Breaking Bread: Insurgent Black Intellectual Life (with , 1991)

bell hooks

The Ethical Dimensions of Marxist Thought (1991)

Prophetic Thought in Postmodern Times: Beyond Eurocentrism and Multiculturalism (1993)

(1993)

Race Matters

Keeping Faith: Philosophy and Race in America (1994)

Jews and Blacks: A Dialogue on Race, Religion, and Culture in America (with Michael Lerner, 1995)

rabbi

(with Henry Louis Gates, Jr., 1996)

The Future of the Race

Restoring Hope: Conversations on the Future of Black America (1997)

The War Against Parents: What We Can Do for America's Beleaguered Moms and Dads (with , 1998)

Sylvia Ann Hewlett

The Future of American Progressivism (with , 1998)

Roberto Unger

The African-American Century: How Black Americans Have Shaped Our Century (with , 2000)

Henry Louis Gates, Jr.

Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight Against Imperialism (2004)

Commentary on , The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions; see The Ultimate Matrix Collection (with Ken Wilber, 2004)

The Matrix

Hope on a Tightrope: Words & Wisdom (2008)

Brother West: Living & Loving Out Loud (2009)

(with Tavis Smiley, 2012)

The Rich and the Rest of Us: A Poverty Manifesto

Pro+Agonist: The Art of Opposition (2012)

(2014)

Black Prophetic Fire

as himself

Long Distance Revolutionary: A Journey with Mumia Abu-Jamal

(2003) as Councilor West

The Matrix Reloaded

(2003) as Councilor West

The Matrix Revolutions

(2005)

Street Fight

(2008)

Examined Life

(2009) as Don Sexton

The Private Lives of Pippa Lee

(2015) as himself

#Bars4Justice

(2016) as himself

Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary

(2019) as himself.[133]

No Safe Spaces

Sketches of My Culture (2001)

Street Knowledge (2004)

Never Forget: A Journey of Revelations (2007) (with BMWMB)

American philosophy

Black existentialism

Christian left

List of American philosophers

Morrison, John (2004). . Philadelphia, PA: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4381-0003-6.

Cornel West

Naden, Corinne J.; Blue, Rose (2005). . Chicago, IL: Heinemann-Raintree Library (division of Reed Elsevier). ISBN 978-1-4109-1040-0. (juvenile nonfiction)

Cornel West

(April 19, 2015). "The Ghost of Cornel West". The New Republic.

Dyson, Michael Eric

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Official website

at IMDb

Cornel West

discography at Discogs

Cornel West

on C-SPAN

Appearances

at The Huffington Post

Column archive