Book Review: The End Of Anger: A New Generation’s Take On Race And Rage
Book Reviewed by Kam Williams
"The End of Anger is an exploration of why it is that many blacks are feeling optimistic these days… [This] is a book about success—about a particularly privileged, even indulged, group of African-Americans whose experiences in many respects are far from the norm…
In January 2009, on the eve of President Barack Obama’s inauguration, a CNN poll found that 69% of blacks agreed that Martin Luther King’s vision had been fulfilled… The election of an African-American president was a Rubicon to be crossed… No longer are there any excuses for denying blacks anything or for blacks denying themselves the opportunity to aim as high as they wish."
— Excerpted from the Introduction (pgs. 1-10)
What a difference a generation makes! When
Ellis Cose first conducted a
study of black graduates of elite academic institutions back in 1994, he
encountered a set of relatively-prospering folks who were nonetheless
frustrated about the obstacles they encountered as they endeavored to ascend
the corporate ladder.
Cose, a contributing editor at Newsweek Magazine, published his incendiary
findings in The Rage of a Privileged Class. What made that groundbreaking
best seller so fascinating was how it revealed widespread discontent amidst
members of a black bourgeoisie who were undeniably better off moneywise, if
not emotionally, than their lesser-educated brethren they’d left behind in
the ghetto.
17 years later, a still curious Cose has subjected a similar demographic to
socioeconomic and psychological analysis, and his microscope has again
uncovered some surprising developments. Focusing solely on graduates of
Harvard Business School and on alumni of a program for gifted minority
students called A Better Chance (ABC), the author discovered this time that
bourgie blacks, like First Lady Michelle Obama, finally feel pretty darn
good about being American.
After all, in spite of the recession, they’re currently flourishing
financially, with over 90% being blessed with six-figure salaries. You even
have a disgraced captain of industry like former CEO Stan O’Neal managing to
retire from Merrill Lynch with a golden parachute of $161 million after
having practically run the Fortune 500 Company into the ground. His failings
are interpreted as a welcome sign that African-American employees no longer
need to worry about being twice as good as their white counterparts to reach
the pinnacle of their chosen professions.
Cose’s research further indicates that the black upper crust has come around
to appreciating the perks associated with its lofty status. "I am much more
optimistic abut the future of my children than I am about the future of all
black children," admits a 39 year-old sister with an MBA from Harvard
University and the wherewithal to afford to pay for private schools.
In sum, The End of Anger heralds the ushering-in of a post-racial age in
America where green is the only color that determines whether you’re gonna
reach the Promise Land.