Barack Obama and the Dilemma of Power: An Africological Observation

by Molefi Kete Asante
Journal of Black Studies, 2007, Vol.38 (1), p.105-115


Abstract

This article examines the prospects and possibilities of presidential power in the event of the election of Obama. A great discourse has ensued about the Obama candidacy for the Democratic nomination because he is the first African American to gain such widespread popular support so soon in the campaign. Indeed, he is the first candidate in history to receive secret service protection so early in the primary campaign because of serious threats against his person by numerous detractors. An Afrocentric examnination of the political campaign and presidential prospects of Obama begins with an interrogation of the nature of the political process in relationship to history, location, the American imperium, and the dilemma of power in a racial politic. Any intense interrogation of Obama's concept of himself as an African American locates him in a particular space and time. The overwhelming racial characteristics of American society, even at this date, suggest that should Obama be nominated and elected, he would still face enormous social and political hurdles institutionalized as White racial hegemony, thus complicating an Obama presidency.

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  • Asante is “one of America’s top 100 leading thinkers.

    —Utne Reader

  • Asante, a sixth-generation American descended from enslaved Africans, has been a guiding light in African American studies.

    —Booklist

  • Molefi Kete Asante is a seminal thinker.

    —Cornel West, Princeton University