The Mis-Education of the Negro

by

Carter G. Woodson

The “Highly Educated” Black Elite Character Analysis

In the 1930s, the Black elite is the small portion of Black Americans who have completed extensive formal education and/or occupy positions of power in the Black community. This group includes (but isn’t limited to) college-educated professionals like teachers, ministers, doctors, lawyers, researchers, and artists. In addition to having more resources and connections than the Black masses, these Black elites often view themselves as sophisticated and take pride in being “highly educated.” Although Carter G. Woodson belongs to this elite, he’s still sharply critical of it. Most importantly, he thinks that the Black elite’s tendency to imitate white people and look down on other Black people reflects the racist biases built into the American education system. In other words, the elite’s biases show how the school system has mis-educated them. Moreover, Woodson argues that this elite is largely corrupt and self-serving: they prefer to profit at the Black community’s expense rather than help the community advance. Therefore, Woodson’s plan to reform the American education system is also an attempt to create a new kind of Black elite—one whose education is an asset rather than a hindrance to the race.

The “Highly Educated” Black Elite Quotes in The Mis-Education of the Negro

The The Mis-Education of the Negro quotes below are all either spoken by The “Highly Educated” Black Elite or refer to The “Highly Educated” Black Elite. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Racism and Education Theme Icon
).
Preface Quotes

It is merely a matter of exercising common sense in approaching people through their environment in order to deal with conditions as they are rather than as you would like to see them or imagine that they are. There may be a difference in method of attack, but the principle remains the same.
“Highly educated” Negroes denounce persons who advocate for the Negro a sort of education different in some respects from that now given the white man. Negroes who have been so long inconvenienced and denied opportunities for development are naturally afraid of anything that sounds like discrimination. They are anxious to have everything the white man has even if it is harmful.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: xi
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1 Quotes

When a Negro has finished his education in our schools, then, he has been equipped to begin the life of an Americanized or Europeanized white man, but before he steps from the threshold of his alma mater he is told by his teachers that he must go back to his own people from whom he has been estranged by a vision of ideals which in his disillusionment he will realize that he cannot attain. He goes forth to play his part in life, but he must be both social and bisocial at the same time. While he is a part of the body politic, he is in addition to this a member of a particular race to which he must restrict himself in all matters social. While serving his country he must serve within a special group. While being a good American, he must above all things be a “good Negro”; and to perform this definite function he must learn to stay in a “Negro’s place.”

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 5-6
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

These earnest workers, however, had more enthusiasm than knowledge. They did not understand the task before them. This undertaking, too, was more of an effort toward social uplift than actual education. Their aim was to transform the Negroes, not to develop them.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

With “mis-educated Negroes” in control themselves, however, it is doubtful that the system would be very much different from what it is or that it would rapidly undergo change. The Negroes thus placed in charge would be the products of the same system and would show no more conception of the task at hand than do the whites who have educated them and shaped their minds as they would have them function. Negro educators of today may have more sympathy and interest in the race than the whites now exploiting Negro institutions as educators, but the former have no more vision than their competitors. Taught from books of the same bias, trained by Caucasians of the same prejudices or by Negroes of enslaved minds, one generation of Negro teachers after another have served for no higher purpose than to do what they are told to do. In other words, a Negro teacher instructing Negro children is in many respects a white teacher thus engaged, for the program in each case is about the same.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 23
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Real education means to inspire people to live more abundantly, to learn to begin with life as they find it and make it better, but the instruction so far given Negroes in colleges and universities has worked to the contrary.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 29
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

The so-called education of Negro college graduates leads them to throw away opportunities which they have and to go in quest of those which they do not find.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 39
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

This minister had given no attention to the religious background of the Negroes to whom he was trying to preach. He knew nothing of their spiritual endowment and their religious experience as influenced by their traditions and environment in which the religion of the Negro has developed and expressed itself. He did not seem to know anything about their present situation. These honest people, therefore, knew nothing additional when he had finished his discourse. As one communicant pointed out, their wants had not been supplied, and they wondered where they might go to hear a word which had some bearing upon the life which they had to live.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite, The Black Masses
Related Symbols: The Black Church
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

If you can control a man’s thinking you do not have to worry about his action. When you determine what a man shall think you do not have to concern yourself about what he will do. If you make a man feel that he is inferior, you do not have to compel him to accept an inferior status, for he will seek it himself. If you make a man think that he is justly an outcast, you do not have to order him to the back door. He will go without being told; and if there is no back door, his very nature will demand one.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

The ambitious of this class do more to keep the race in a state of turmoil and to prevent it from serious community effort than all the other elements combined. The one has a job that the other wants; or the one is a leader of a successful faction, and the other is struggling to supplant him. Everything in the community, then, must yield ground to this puerile contest.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

The Negroes, however, will not advance far if they continue to waste their energy abusing those who misdirect and exploit them. The exploiters of the race are not so much at fault as the race itself. If Negroes persist in permitting themselves to be handled in this fashion they will always find some one at hand to impose upon them. The matter is one which rests largely with the Negroes themselves. The race will free itself from exploiters just as soon as it decides to do so. No one else can accomplish this task for the race. It must plan and do for itself.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite, The Black Masses
Page Number: 117
Explanation and Analysis:

The race needs workers, not leaders. Such workers will solve the problems which race leaders talk about and raise money to enable them to talk more and more about. […] If we can finally succeed in translating the idea of leadership into that of service, we may soon find it possible to lift the Negro to a higher level.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 118-9
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

Right in the heart of the highly educated Negro section of Washington, too, is a restaurant catering through the front door exclusively to the white business men, who must live in the Negroes’ section to supply them with the necessities of life, and catering at the same time through the back door to numbers of Negroes who pile into that dingy room to purchase whatever may be thrown at them. Yet less than two blocks away are several Negroes running cafés where they can be served for the same amount and under desirable circumstances. Negroes who do this, we say, do not have the proper attitude toward life and its problems, and for that reason we do not take up time with them. They do not belong to our community. The traducers of the race, however, are guiding these people the wrong way. Why do not the “educated” Negroes change their course by identifying themselves with the masses?

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite, The Black Masses
Page Number: 163
Explanation and Analysis:
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The “Highly Educated” Black Elite Quotes in The Mis-Education of the Negro

The The Mis-Education of the Negro quotes below are all either spoken by The “Highly Educated” Black Elite or refer to The “Highly Educated” Black Elite. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Racism and Education Theme Icon
).
Preface Quotes

It is merely a matter of exercising common sense in approaching people through their environment in order to deal with conditions as they are rather than as you would like to see them or imagine that they are. There may be a difference in method of attack, but the principle remains the same.
“Highly educated” Negroes denounce persons who advocate for the Negro a sort of education different in some respects from that now given the white man. Negroes who have been so long inconvenienced and denied opportunities for development are naturally afraid of anything that sounds like discrimination. They are anxious to have everything the white man has even if it is harmful.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: xi
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1 Quotes

When a Negro has finished his education in our schools, then, he has been equipped to begin the life of an Americanized or Europeanized white man, but before he steps from the threshold of his alma mater he is told by his teachers that he must go back to his own people from whom he has been estranged by a vision of ideals which in his disillusionment he will realize that he cannot attain. He goes forth to play his part in life, but he must be both social and bisocial at the same time. While he is a part of the body politic, he is in addition to this a member of a particular race to which he must restrict himself in all matters social. While serving his country he must serve within a special group. While being a good American, he must above all things be a “good Negro”; and to perform this definite function he must learn to stay in a “Negro’s place.”

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 5-6
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

These earnest workers, however, had more enthusiasm than knowledge. They did not understand the task before them. This undertaking, too, was more of an effort toward social uplift than actual education. Their aim was to transform the Negroes, not to develop them.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

With “mis-educated Negroes” in control themselves, however, it is doubtful that the system would be very much different from what it is or that it would rapidly undergo change. The Negroes thus placed in charge would be the products of the same system and would show no more conception of the task at hand than do the whites who have educated them and shaped their minds as they would have them function. Negro educators of today may have more sympathy and interest in the race than the whites now exploiting Negro institutions as educators, but the former have no more vision than their competitors. Taught from books of the same bias, trained by Caucasians of the same prejudices or by Negroes of enslaved minds, one generation of Negro teachers after another have served for no higher purpose than to do what they are told to do. In other words, a Negro teacher instructing Negro children is in many respects a white teacher thus engaged, for the program in each case is about the same.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 23
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Real education means to inspire people to live more abundantly, to learn to begin with life as they find it and make it better, but the instruction so far given Negroes in colleges and universities has worked to the contrary.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 29
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

The so-called education of Negro college graduates leads them to throw away opportunities which they have and to go in quest of those which they do not find.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 39
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

This minister had given no attention to the religious background of the Negroes to whom he was trying to preach. He knew nothing of their spiritual endowment and their religious experience as influenced by their traditions and environment in which the religion of the Negro has developed and expressed itself. He did not seem to know anything about their present situation. These honest people, therefore, knew nothing additional when he had finished his discourse. As one communicant pointed out, their wants had not been supplied, and they wondered where they might go to hear a word which had some bearing upon the life which they had to live.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite, The Black Masses
Related Symbols: The Black Church
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

If you can control a man’s thinking you do not have to worry about his action. When you determine what a man shall think you do not have to concern yourself about what he will do. If you make a man feel that he is inferior, you do not have to compel him to accept an inferior status, for he will seek it himself. If you make a man think that he is justly an outcast, you do not have to order him to the back door. He will go without being told; and if there is no back door, his very nature will demand one.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

The ambitious of this class do more to keep the race in a state of turmoil and to prevent it from serious community effort than all the other elements combined. The one has a job that the other wants; or the one is a leader of a successful faction, and the other is struggling to supplant him. Everything in the community, then, must yield ground to this puerile contest.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:

The Negroes, however, will not advance far if they continue to waste their energy abusing those who misdirect and exploit them. The exploiters of the race are not so much at fault as the race itself. If Negroes persist in permitting themselves to be handled in this fashion they will always find some one at hand to impose upon them. The matter is one which rests largely with the Negroes themselves. The race will free itself from exploiters just as soon as it decides to do so. No one else can accomplish this task for the race. It must plan and do for itself.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite, The Black Masses
Page Number: 117
Explanation and Analysis:

The race needs workers, not leaders. Such workers will solve the problems which race leaders talk about and raise money to enable them to talk more and more about. […] If we can finally succeed in translating the idea of leadership into that of service, we may soon find it possible to lift the Negro to a higher level.

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite
Page Number: 118-9
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

Right in the heart of the highly educated Negro section of Washington, too, is a restaurant catering through the front door exclusively to the white business men, who must live in the Negroes’ section to supply them with the necessities of life, and catering at the same time through the back door to numbers of Negroes who pile into that dingy room to purchase whatever may be thrown at them. Yet less than two blocks away are several Negroes running cafés where they can be served for the same amount and under desirable circumstances. Negroes who do this, we say, do not have the proper attitude toward life and its problems, and for that reason we do not take up time with them. They do not belong to our community. The traducers of the race, however, are guiding these people the wrong way. Why do not the “educated” Negroes change their course by identifying themselves with the masses?

Related Characters: Carter G. Woodson (speaker), The “Highly Educated” Black Elite, The Black Masses
Page Number: 163
Explanation and Analysis: