America's Literary Archives are replete with historical narratives that depict and
expresses the promulgation of American exceptionalism. They mostly underscore
Angle-European heroism and fortitude that made possible the exploration conquests of
Roanoke and Jamestown, Virginia to the technological superiority America experiences
today and all major events during that four hundred years span. Some reference specific
topics -- Presidents, wars, race ethnicity, government, etc. -- and their influence in
galvanizing "The People" to produce the current worlds' super-power. As the most
notable books on American history are written by educated and influential authors that
sincerely attempt to paint literary portraits of American history that are not occidentally
benign, a darker, not so favorable narrative exists that has had an even greater effect
on this nation than one would dare to articulate because of ideology; racism. This
book however, is intended to capture an honest view of a journey through Americas'
darkest past from the disparate African American / Black perspective as they navigated a
Labyrinth of Sterile immanence from servitude toward freedom and eventual acceptance
of a symbiotic citizenship with symbolic equal rights by a recalcitrant 'public'. That
journey was not only plagued by a predisposed racist culture of white supremacy, it
was callously sanctioned by an Anglo-Supreme Court law that still persists today in
many respects. The consequences of racism in America are intended, with respect to the
'other', despite plausible condescending arguments to the contrary.
This work started as a thesis and morphed into a short novel. The following
edition will be a novel in earnest, and give a clear view of the origin, psychology, and
perpetuation of racism in American.