Bakari Sellers My Vanishing Country



In the 2014 gubernatorial election in South Carolina, Bakari Sellers, a young black legislator with a first name reminiscent of Barack Obama’s, was running for lieutenant governor against “good old boy” politician (and current governor) Henry McMaster. Sellers had no national profile until the media called upon him to comment on the massacre of nine parishioners at the historic “Mother” Emanuel Church in Charleston in 2015. From there, Sellers became a political pundit on CNN. In a new memoir, he recounts his journey from a dirt-poor town in South Carolina’s “Corridor of Shame” to his life as a lawyer and advocate for the voiceless in a very loud nation.

  1. Bakari Sellers Author
  2. My Vanishing Country A Memoir
  3. Bakari Sellers My Vanishing Country Review
  4. Bakari Sellers Book Review

My Vanishing Country fulfills the double-nature of many African-American memoirs, autobiographies, and even (in the case of Harriet Wilson’s Our Nig) fiction: it serves not only to tell us about the life of the author or protagonist but also to inspire activism and resistance to America’s long history of white supremacy and crimes against people of color. Sellers joins a long line of Black authors like Frederick Douglass and others who penned slave narratives in the nineteenth century, as well as Malcolm X in the twentieth and Ta-Nehisi Coates in the twenty-first. Each uses their personal struggle to reflect the African-American struggle in miniature, and to address the needs of a diverse, wounded, and mistreated community.

Sellers

Bakari Sellers has a deeply personal tie to the Civil Rights Movement of the Fifties and Sixties; his father, radicalized by the death of Emmett Till, became a trusted friend and associate of Martin Luther King, Jr., Julian Bond, and Stokely Carmichael. The Orangeburg Massacre of 1968 occurred in part because the FBI and local law enforcement targeted Cleveland Sellers for arrest and possibly assassination. Police killed three students from an all-black university, and wounded several more, in the encounter.

Bakari Sellers Author

Sellers grew up in Denmark, a primarily black town in a part of South Carolina where schools are in a constant state of collapse, the textbooks are at least two generations out of date, and representatives in the state house are more interested in lining their own pockets than in representing their constituents. He graduated high school and college early, ran for office against a long-term white incumbent and won the 2006 election, becoming the youngest lawmaker in state history. In 2014, he ran to become lieutenant governor, all before reaching the age of thirty.

But it’s not about personal gain, as Sellers makes clear in his book. He would rather bring benefits to his constituents and make sure that people in power hear their voices. In a part of the country where the majority population is black but the minority white population is in power, that just doesn’t happen very often. Sellers in his book to address the precarious health care situation for black women, who often die at higher mortality rates than white women because their doctors don’t take their pain seriously.

He also discusses the death of his close friend Clementa Pickney and eight others in the horrific shooting at Mother Emanuel, which prompted the removal of the Confederate flag from its place of “honor” on the state house grounds in Columbia. And he addresses the election of Donald Trump, a man diametrically opposed to everything that Sellers has worked for in his life.

Bakari Sellers is a son of South Carolina, but he’s from a part of the state that might be unfamiliar to someone raised in another, more affluent (or at least more white) part. He’s come a long way as a lawyer, legislator, pundit, and activist. But his work is never done, not until he no longer needs to hold up a mirror to the America that doesn’t recognize the humanity of him nor that of his black brothers and sisters. HIs memoir is less a summation than a call to action, and it behooves every reader, no matter their complexion, to heed that call.

The Vanishing Country of Bakari Sellers An urgent memoir, a call to action June 11, 2020 Trevor Seigler 0 Comments Bakari Sellers, Barack Obama, Harriet Wilson, Malcolm X, Ta-Nehisi Coates. Part memoir, part historical and cultural analysis, My Vanishing Country is an eye-opening journey through the South's past, present, and future. Anchored in in Bakari Seller’s hometown of Denmark, South Carolina, Country illuminates the pride and pain that continues to fertilize the soil of one of the poorest states in the nation.

(Amistad, May 19, 2020)

You May Also Like

  • May 13, 2019
  • January 16, 2013
  • August 16, 2020

Buy the Audiobook
Buy the eBook

Publication Date: May 19, 2020
List Price: $26.99
Format: Hardcover
Classification: Nonfiction
ISBN13: 9780062917454
Imprint: Amistad
Publisher: HarperCollins
Parent Company: News Corporation
Borrow from Library

Book Description:

My Vanishing Country A Memoir

In the tradition of Hillbilly Elegy, the CNN analyst and youngest state representative in South Carolina’s history illuminates the lives of America’s forgotten rural, Black working-class men and women.

Bakari Sellers My Vanishing Country Review

Part memoir, part historical and cultural analysis, Bakari Sellers takes readers on a journey through the South’s past, present, and future. Anchoring his narrative in Denmark, South Carolina, readers will discover the pride and the pain that continues to flow through the soil of one of the poorest states in the nation.

While charting the rise of his father to becoming an influential president of the state’s NAACP chapter, Sellers offers a firsthand description of the South’s dwindling rural, Black working class—many of whom can trace their ancestry back for seven generations.

In Sellers’ poetic personal history, we are awakened to the other “Forgotten Men & Women,” who the media seldom acknowledges. For Sellers these are his family members, neighbors, and friends.

In each of the book’s twelve chapters, Sellers humanizes their plight as they struggle to gain access to healthcare with disappearing rural hospitals, struggle to make ends meet with the evaporation of the factories they relied on, and they struggle to forge a path forward without succumbing to hopelessness. Country is also a love letter to fatherhood—first from Sellers' father, whose life lessons anchor Bakari, and to his newborn twins, who he hopes will embrace the Sellers name and legacy.


Bakari Sellers Book Review

More books like My Vanishing Country may be found by selecting the categories below: