I-Search (Imposter Syndrome & Black Male Leadership)

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wendell Johnson
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
D'Weston Haywood

This chapter reinterprets the New Negro era as an intense moment of jockeying for racial leadership among certain black male leaders and black male publishers in Harlem. This chapter argues that when Marcus Garvey arrived in Harlem to build his Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), he stepped into a crucible of New Negro thought, organizing, and publications with competing visions for racial advancement. The UNIA’s businesses and paper, the Negro World, helped make Garvey the premier black leader of his day. But debates about his ideas among many black leaders quickly led to a public war of words between Garvey and critics in which they strove to use their papers to destroy the leadership of the other. Garvey used the Negro World to perform a rhetorical emasculation of critics. Garvey’s critics retaliated with the “Garvey Must Go” campaign. It not only laid bare a contentious battle in print among rival black male leaders, but also the influence the black press now had to elevate and/or destroy black male leadership.


2021 ◽  
pp. 152342232110377
Author(s):  
Cynthia M. Sims ◽  
Angela D. Carter ◽  
Torrence E. Sparkman ◽  
Lonnie R. Morris ◽  
Ande Durojaiye

The Problem Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, and other Black men (and women) successfully used servant leadership to advance U.S. civil rights. Yet, the value of these leadership practices among Black men in contemporary workplaces is not known. The decision to lead may be based upon one’s leadership self-efficacy and influenced by community and as Black men prioritize social justice and developing others, they may be servant leaders. While engaged, the role of microaggression on engagement has not been studied. Thus, research is needed on Black male leadership. The Solution This study examined whether Black men possess the antecedent of leadership efficacy, demonstrate servant leadership, experience the outcome of engagement, and microaggressions, whether microaggressions mediated and decreased their engagement, and did socio-identities function as a moderator. Using cross-sectional survey methodology, a confirmatory factor analysis and a causal model was conducted along with a post hoc ANOVA. Black men leaders were about a third of the sample ( n = 364). The structural equation modeling revealed the significant findings that leadership efficacy predicted servant leadership, servant leadership predicted engagement, and, microaggressions partially mediated engagement. Socio-identities did moderate leadership efficacy, engagement, and microaggressions but not servant leadership and the overall measurement model. The Stakeholders This study benefits HRD and other scholars and practitioners who study leadership including those with intersecting identities—African American men.


Author(s):  
Todd McGowan

This chapter presents an interview with Spike Lee. Topics covered include what he thinks about the love/hate relationship between Italian Americans and black Americans in the 1970s and 1980s; whether he feels that he played a part in helping create images of black male leadership and strength; whether he thinks that Miracle at St. Anna's (2009) “look” at World War II's atrocities helps provide a window into seeing how far people can take violence and cruelty past the edge of reason; what the thinks about the fact that some of his best films have been overlooked by the Oscars; his use of multiracial production teams; and his film projects.


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