• The Autobiography of Malcolm X

Malcolm X and Alex Haley

  • Literature Notes
  • Malcolm X Biography
  • Character List
  • Summary and Analysis
  • Chapters 1-3
  • Chapters 4-7
  • Chapters 8-12
  • Chapters 13-16
  • Chapters 17-19
  • Character Analysis
  • Malcolm X (Malcolm Little, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz)
  • Elijah Muhammad (Elijah Poole, Elijah Karriem)
  • Reverend Earl Little
  • Louise Little
  • Ella (Ella Mae Little Collins)
  • Betty X (Betty Shabazz)
  • Critical Essay
  • Three Assessments of Malcolm X
  • Essay Questions
  • Cite this Literature Note

Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska, on May 19, 1925; he dropped the "slave name" Little and adopted the initial X (representing an unknown) when he became a member of the Nation of Islam. Malcolm was the seventh of his father's nine children — three by a previous marriage — and his mother's fourth child. His father, Reverend Earl Little, was a Baptist minister and an organizer for Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association, a black separatist "back-to-Africa" group of the 1920s.

Most of Malcolm's early life was spent in and about Lansing, Michigan, where the family lived on a farm. Although the Little family was poor, they were self-sufficient until Reverend Little's death in 1931. After this, family unity began to dissolve: first Malcolm, who had become a discipline problem, was sent to live with another family in 1937; and later that year, Mrs. Little suffered a severe nervous breakdown and was sent to the state mental hospital. The other children became wards of the state.

Malcolm's defiant behavior toward authority remained a problem, and at thirteen, he was sent to the Michigan State Detention Home, bound for reform school. At the detention home, he received favored treatment (as a "mascot" of the white couple who operated the home), and rather than being sent on to reform school, he remained in the home through the eighth grade.

In junior high school, Malcolm became an outstanding student and was very popular with his schoolmates. But his world was upset in the eighth grade when his English teacher advised him not to try to become a lawyer because he was "a nigger." He became despondent and his schoolwork suffered. Finally, he asked to be transferred to the custody of his half-sister Ella, who lived in Boston. The request was granted, and he arrived in Boston in the spring of 1941.

In Boston, Malcolm found himself more attracted to the street life in the ghetto than to Ella's upper-class Roxbury society. A friend got him a job as a shoeshine boy at the Roseland Ballroom, which rapidly became the center of his social life. With straightened hair and wearing a zoot suit, the hustler's uniform, he began to spend most of his free time there, dancing and learning the trades of the con man, the pimp, the dope pusher, and the thief. Ella's last hopes for saving him from ruin disappeared when he jilted Laura, the "respectable" Roxbury girl he had been dating, for a white woman, Sophia.

When America entered World War II, Malcolm was sixteen, too young for the army, but by lying about his age, he was able to get a job on the railroad, the war having caused a shortage of black porters, cooks, and waiters. This job took him for the first time to New York City, and when he was fired from the railroad for wild behavior, he went to Harlem to live.

He took a job as a waiter at Small's Paradise, a famous Harlem club, where he became acquainted with the elite of Harlem's underworld. When he was fired from Small's for soliciting an Army spy for a prostitute, he moved naturally into the sorts of jobs he had been learning from Small's customers — selling marijuana, stickups, numbers running, and bootlegging. After running into trouble with another hustler, and a narrow scrape with the police, Malcolm fled back to Boston. There he formed a burglary ring, with Sophia, her sister, and his friend Shorty. Again, he got into trouble: first, with a friend of Sophia's white husband; then, with the police. He was caught and sentenced to ten years in prison.

During his seven years in prison (1946-52), Malcolm underwent a great change. He was greatly influenced by a prisoner called Bimbi, a self-educated man who convinced Malcolm of the value of education. In the intervening years since leaving the eighth grade, Malcolm had forgotten how to read and write, but with Bimbi's tutelage and encouragement, he began to read and study, even taking correspondence courses in English and Latin.

In 1948, Malcolm's brother Reginald visited the prison and told Malcolm that he had a way to get him out of prison. He would not elaborate upon his scheme, but he did tell Malcolm not to eat any more pork. Purely on faith, Malcolm followed Reginald's advice. He later saw this as an instance of Allah, the God of Islam, working his will.

Reginald's plan was to enlist Malcolm as a member of the Nation of Islam, popularly known as the "Black Muslims." This religion, founded by Elijah Muhammad in the 1930s, strongly urged the separation of the races and considered the white man as the devil incarnate — a tenet which Malcolm was, by this time, quite willing to believe. The teachings of Elijah Muhammad stimulated Malcolm's interest in history, particularly in the history of the black peoples of the world; he found after studying history that there was compelling evidence of the white man's evil nature. Thus Malcolm joined the Nation of Islam and adopted the name by which he was to become famous — Malcolm X.

In 1952, Malcolm was paroled and went to Detroit to live with his brother Wilfred, also a member of the Black Muslims. Malcolm took a job in an automobile factory and began finding out all he could about the Nation of Islam. He even went to Chicago to meet Elijah Muhammad and eventually quit his job to study personally under this man, whom he considered his "savior." Late in 1953, Malcolm returned to Boston to organize a Black Muslim temple there, and in 1954, he was sent to Philadelphia; as a reward for his speed and diligence in organizing the temple there, he was appointed minister of Temple Seven in Harlem.

In the years between 1953 and 1963, the Nation of Islam grew from a small number of storefront temples to a large, organized, vocal national movement dedicated to black separatism, and Malcolm became its best-known and most volatile spokesman.

During this time, he was minister of Temple Number Seven and was organizer of several other temples around the country. He became increasingly close to Elijah Muhammad, both as an adviser and a friend. Early in 1958, Malcolm was married to Betty X, a member of his congregation. During the next seven years, they had four daughters, Attilah, Qubilah, Ilyasah, and Amiliah.

In 1959, the Black Muslims began to attract nationwide publicity. They were the subject of a television documentary, "The Hate That Hate Produced," which focused primarily on Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm, emphasizing the organization's separatist doctrines and official hatred of whites. This program, along with C. Eric Lincoln's book Black Muslims in America and a series of violent confrontations with the police, rapidly vaulted Malcolm into national prominence as a symbol of, and spokesman for, the "angry black man." Because he was a symbol of racial hatred, he had frequent notoriety in the press concerning the burgeoning integration movement, which he opposed. For white America, he became an object of hatred and fear, especially for those liberal whites who backed integration.

Malcolm's sudden notoriety had unexpected results; Elijah Muhammad, fearful of his growing influence, began to withdraw his support of Malcolm. At the same time, Malcolm began to hear rumors that Elijah Muhammad had been violating the moral codes of the Nation of Islam by committing adultery. The rift between the two men gradually grew wider and finally resulted in Malcolm's being silenced and his ultimate suspension from the organization.

The incident which led to the suspension (though it was more likely an excuse than an actual cause) was Malcolm's remark in November of 1963 that the assassination of President Kennedy was a case of "chickens coming home to roost." Although the suspension was initially to be for only ninety days, Malcolm suspected that it would become permanent. His suspicions were confirmed when a member of his temple confessed to him that he had been ordered to assassinate Malcolm by bombing his car. The assassination order, which could have been given only by Elijah Muhammad himself, hastened Malcolm's "psychological divorce" from the Muslims. Soon his newfound feeling of independence, coupled with his awareness of his popularity with ghetto blacks, led him to found his own organization.

Despite its name, Muslim Mosque, Inc., Malcolm's organization was intended to be primarily a secular, politically-oriented activist group dedicated to carrying out the program of racial separation and community control which the Nation of Islam had put forth but failed to act upon. Malcolm realized the necessity of including blacks of all faiths in his new organization, so he attempted to de-emphasize the religious bias. At the same time, however, he was being influenced more and more by the orthodox Islam faith of the Middle East, and early in 1964, he decided to make a pilgrimage to Mecca, the Holy City of Islam — a journey which every true Muslim must make once in his lifetime.

Malcolm's pilgrimage to Mecca was financed by Ella, who had also broken with the Nation of Islam, and who had been saving to make the pilgrimage herself. The trip was arranged with the cooperation and assistance of Muslim officials in America, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia; all obstacles in the complicated procedure of obtaining permission to enter the city were ignored because of the assistance of other Muslims, black and white. During the pilgrimage, Malcolm began to realize that the whiteness he had hated and fought in America was not so much a matter of color, as the Nation of Islam had taught, but a matter of attitude and behavior. Being white did not make a man evil; but being a white American, however, generally did imply certain patterns of behavior and certain attitudes about race. Thus Malcolm began to believe that the only way that America could avert racial disaster was to alter its social makeup and to accept the "Oneness of Man" under the "Oneness of God" — a truth which "Christian" white America had ignored.

This is not to say that Malcolm came to embrace the doctrine of integration; he did not. He still believed in the separation of races, mainly because of the natural inclination of peoples of similar color to seek one another out. But he did believe it possible for people of different races to cooperate and coexist if they would learn to consider one another as brothers under Allah.

After the pilgrimage, Malcolm once again changed his name. The first change had been the renunciation of his "slave name," Little; the new change was the acceptance of the ceremonial Muslim title, Elijah Malik El-Shabazz, "the pilgrim Malcolm the Negro." He was made a guest of the state by Prince Faisal of Saudi Arabia, who granted him a personal audience and discussed with him the doctrinal differences between Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam and true Islam.

On his return journey, Malcolm visited several Middle Eastern and African countries and was received as an important visitor by both state officials and African-American expatriates in Nigeria and Ghana. This journey revealed to him the internal role of the black man and the possibilities of an international union of purpose among black people. It was this awakening that led to the idea of taking the matter of the black man's role in America before the United Nations — that is, he wanted to treat it as an international problem.

Malcolm was not surprised that his idea failed to gain wide support, nor that African Americans did not rush to follow him into orthodox Islam as their religion. He felt that circumstances had permitted him to realize things they could not yet realize, especially during his pilgrimage to Mecca; therefore, they could not fully understand the significance of his new religion and his feelings about international black unity.

Malcolm made another trip to Africa and to the Middle East later in 1964, and was again received as a visiting dignitary by the heads of state of the various nations he visited. He returned and spent much time working with his Organization of Afro-American Unity, which he had founded after his first trip abroad. These last few months of his life were a time of intense pressure. He was under continual threat of assassination by the Black Muslims, and his assistants were continually harassed and assaulted. His family was threatened with eviction from their home, which was owned by the Nation of Islam; and pressing financial needs of both his family and his fledgling organization kept him busy, speaking on college campuses and filming television programs. He also spent a great deal of time attempting to mend his relationship with more "moderate" black leaders.

Early in 1965, he traveled to France and England to make speaking engagements, but he was refused entry to France because he was an "undesirable." The night of his return to New York (February 13), his home was firebombed. Malcolm and his family escaped injury, but half the house was destroyed. Malcolm accused the Black Muslims of this attempt on his life; the Muslims countered with the charge that Malcolm had bombed the house himself for the sake of publicity. A few days later, Malcolm confided to his collaborator on the Autobiography, Alex Haley, that he was no longer certain that it was the Muslims who were attempting to take his life. He made no specific charges but said that he thought the attempts might be related to "what happened to me in France" — implying some sort of threat against him by persons in positions of authority.

On Sunday, February 21, 1965, Malcolm X was assassinated. He was to speak at an Organization of Afro-American Unity organizational meeting at the Audubon Ballroom in Harlem. As he began to speak, a fight broke out in the audience. During the ensuing confusion, three gunmen approached the stage and shot him down. He died instantly.

Three men, two of them Black Muslims, were arrested and convicted of the crime, but many of Malcolm's adherents still feel that the assassination was planned and carried out by a larger group of conspirators, perhaps including agents of the U.S. government. Whoever killed Malcolm, however, did not succeed in destroying his influence. Through The Autobiography of Malcolm X, published after his death, he has reached a much wider and more sympathetic audience than he ever had during his lifetime.

The volume may be read in many ways. As an autobiography, it tells the life story of an interesting and important man. As a sociological study, it provides fascinating insights into ghetto life and the ways which one man learned to survive in the ghetto. As a religious work — which is perhaps the way Malcolm intended the book to be read — it tells of his struggle to find his God. Yet it is as a political work that the book has had its strongest impact. Through the Autobiography, Malcolm has continued to exert great influence over the various black radical political movements since his death. His precise political position at the end of his life is unclear; however, he had been going through a period of transition during the year since his expulsion from the Nation of Islam, and he had been reassessing his old beliefs. One of the major difficulties with this autobiography is the fact that it was written over a period of two years, during one of which he was still a Black Muslim minister; also, he died before the book could be put into final form. Therefore, his attitudes expressed in the book sometimes seem contradictory, and it is difficult to tell in exactly what direction he was moving at the end of his life. Perhaps he would most like to be remembered as he suggested to Life magazine reporter Gordon Parks a few days before his death. "It's a time for martyrs now. And if I'm to be one, it will be in the cause of brotherhood."

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Book Summary The Autobiography of Malcolm X , by Malcolm X and Alex Haley

Published in 1965, The Autobiography of Malcolm X chronicles how Malcolm X rose from a life of poverty and crime to become a significant leader of the civil rights movement. Malcolm X was a controversial figure—his views were often considered extreme and changed radically throughout his life. In telling his story (with the help of writer Alex Haley), Malcolm X explains why he believed what he believed—and why he fought for racial justice, even though he knew it would lead to his death.

This guide discusses the impact that early experiences of racism, pro-Black radical traditions, and Islam had on Malcolm X as well as his achievements as a civil rights activist. We’ll go into the historical and sociological context surrounding Malcolm X’s life and explore the civil rights movement (and Malcolm X’s relationship to other activists, like Martin Luther King Jr.) in more depth. We’ll also connect historical and present-day racism, and we’ll provide an update on the circumstances leading up to Malcolm X’s murder and his legacy.

The Autobiography of Malcolm X

1-Page Summary 1-Page Book Summary of The Autobiography of Malcolm X

Published in 1965, The Autobiography of Malcolm X explains how Malcolm X rose from a life of poverty and crime to become a significant leader of the civil rights movement. Malcolm X was a controversial figure—his views were often considered extreme, and they changed radically throughout his life. In telling his life story, Malcolm X explains why he believed what he believed—and why he fought stalwartly for racial justice, even though he knew it would lead to his death.

This book was written by Malcolm X and Alex Haley, a journalist and author of the novel Roots , which later became a record-breaking television series. Haley recorded interviews with Malcolm X,...

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The Autobiography of Malcolm X Summary Malcolm X’s Early Life Was Marred by Racism

Malcolm X believed that the racism he experienced throughout his childhood to adolescence determined the path he would take as an adult. In this section, we’ll explain how racist violence and structural inequality destabilized and discouraged a young Malcolm X—and ultimately led him to spend time in prison.

Racism Destabilized and Discouraged Him

Malcolm X explains that he was born Malcolm Little on May 19, 1925 in Omaha, Nebraska. (Shortform note: He eventually dropped “Little” and changed his name to Malcolm X—we’ll discuss that decision later, but we’ll still refer to him as Malcolm X throughout the guide.)

From the time he was born, his family was constantly being threatened by racists, in part because his father, Earl Little, was associated with Marcus Garvey’s Back-to-Africa movement, which argued that Black Americans must move to Africa to attain dignity and self-determination. As a result, the family moved often; eventually, they settled in Lansing, Michigan.

(Shortform note: Historians explain that between 1880 and 1940, Black Americans faced particularly high levels of *[racial...

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The Autobiography of Malcolm X Summary The Nation of Islam Gave X a Second Chance

While he was in prison, some of Malcolm X’s family converted to Islam—and they promised that they could help him get out of prison if he joined, too. In this section, we’ll discuss the unique teachings of the Islamic organization he joined. Then, we’ll explore how his involvement in this organization changed his life for the better, culminating in the beginning of his civil rights career.

The Nation of Islam’s Unique Teachings

The type of Islam Malcolm X’s family tried to convert him to was known as the Nation of Islam —a collection of teachings promoted by Elijah Muhammad (the Nation of Islam’s leader, who succeeded founder W.D. Fard), which posited that white people are the devil and that they’ve perpetrated evil against Black men by cutting them off from their ancestral cultures and convincing them of white superiority. Malcolm X explains that according to this belief system, the different races were purposefully created by a scientist named Yacub through eugenic engineering, and the white race was supposed to rule the world for 6,000 years before Black people (who were the original and naturally superior race) would ascend to the top.

(Shortform note: Now...

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The Autobiography of Malcolm X Summary A Pilgrimage to Mecca Opened Malcolm X’s Eyes

Although the Nation of Islam helped turn Malcolm X into a successful civil rights activist, problems were brewing within the organization that he couldn’t abide by. In this section, we’ll explain why Malcolm X broke from the Nation of Islam and explore how his beliefs and civil rights work changed afterward.

Malcolm X’s Break From the Nation of Islam

Malcolm X gained prominence that other Nation of Islam leaders didn’t—and he explains that eventually, Elijah Muhammad became jealous of him. He made Malcolm X the first National Minister of the organization and praised him to his face; all the while, he told others Malcolm X was untrustworthy and that he’d betray the Nation of Islam. But Malcolm X came to know that Muhammad was the untrustworthy one: He’d been having adulterous affairs with his secretaries, who became pregnant and were harshly punished for it.

Eventually, some of those secretaries filed a paternity lawsuit against Muhammad, and Malcolm X spoke to them himself to discover the truth. He’d been hearing rumors about Muhammad’s adultery for years, but his respect for the man and dependence on his teachings had prevented him from believing them. After talking to...

The Autobiography of Malcolm X Summary Malcolm X’s Death and Legacy

Before Malcolm X had a chance to accomplish very much with his newfound beliefs and organization, he was murdered in front of his family and community. In this section, we’ll explore the circumstances around his death and discuss his legacy.

Malcolm X explains that from a young age, he believed he would die a violent death —partly because that had happened to his father and other men in his family. Now that he’d left the Nation of Islam and begun making headway as a civil rights activist, he was even more convinced that someone would kill him.

(Shortform note: Although Malcolm X expected to be killed primarily because he was a Black activist, Black men in general have a significantly higher chance of dying a violent death. Some studies suggest that young Black men in the US are 20 times more likely to die by homicide than young white men—homicide is the most common cause of death among the demographic, and this likelihood shaves six months off the average Black man’s life expectancy. [Police shootings account for a disproportionate number of homicide...

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Shortform Exercise: What Does Malcolm X’s Life Mean to You?

Take some time to reflect on what you’ve learned about Malcolm X and his work as a civil rights activist.

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Table of Contents

sparknotes malcolm x autobiography

The Autobiography of Malcolm X

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The Autobiography of Malcolm X

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92 pages • 3 hours read

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Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Chapters 1-4

Chapters 5-9

Chapters 10-12

Chapters 13-15

Chapters 16-18

Chapter 19-Epilogue

Key Figures

Index of Terms

Important Quotes

Essay Topics

Chapter 1 Summary: “Nightmare”

Malcolm’s narrative begins when he is still in the womb. In 1925, Ku Klux Klan riders terrorize his pregnant mother Louise Helen Little in Omaha, Nebraska. The Klan riders demand to see her husband Earl, a Baptist minister spreading the Pan-African teachings of Marcus Garvey, a highly controversial figure among Whites. When the riders learn that Earl is away preaching in Milwaukee, they smash all the windows of Louise’s home with their rifle butts. Rightly concerned about the safety of his family, Earl moves his wife and four children—Wilfred, Hilda, Philbert, and newborn Malcolm—to Milwaukee.

After a brief stay in Milwaukee, during which Louise gives birth to another son, Reginald, the family settles in Lansing, Michigan. There, Earl’s Pan-African teachings draw the ire of the Black Legion , a local White supremacist terrorist organization. In 1929, in what Malcolm calls one of his earliest memories, Black Legion members set fire to his home. The family barely escapes before the house collapses.

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COMMENTS

  1. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: Study Guide

    Find a general summary, chapter summaries, and famous quotes from the autobiography by Malcolm X and Alex Haley. Learn about the life, views, and legacy of the civil rights leader and activist.

  2. The Autobiography of Malcolm X Epilogue Summary & Analysis

    A summary of Epilogue in Malcolm X & Alex Haley's The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Learn exactly what happened in this chapter, scene, or section of The Autobiography of Malcolm X and what it means. Perfect for acing essays, tests, and quizzes, as well as for writing lesson plans.

  3. The Autobiography of Malcolm X Summary

    A comprehensive and detailed plot summary of Malcolm X's life, from his childhood in Michigan to his conversion to Islam and his role in the Nation of Islam. Learn about his experiences with racism, crime, prison, and activism, as well as his relationship with Elijah Muhammad and his assassination.

  4. The Autobiography of Malcolm X Study Guide

    Malcolm X was born to a rural family in Omaha, Nebraska. His father, Earl Little, had strong views on race relations that drew the ire of conservative whites. This led to racial violence that eventually resulted in Earl's death and the scattering of the Little family. Malcolm moved to Boston and then New York as a teenager in 1929, where he ...

  5. The Autobiography of Malcolm X

    Summary. Published posthumously, The Autobiography of Malcolm X is an account of the life of Malcolm X, born Malcolm Little (1925-1965), who became a human rights activist.Beginning with his mother's pregnancy, the book describes Malcolm's childhood first in Omaha, Nebraska and then in the area around Lansing and Mason, Michigan, the death of his father under questionable circumstances, and ...

  6. The Autobiography of Malcolm X Summary and Study Guide

    Thanks for exploring this SuperSummary Study Guide of "The Autobiography of Malcolm X" by Malcolm X, Alex Haley. A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions ...

  7. The Autobiography of Malcolm X Chapters Five, Six, & Seven Summary

    A summary of Chapters Five, Six, & Seven in Malcolm X & Alex Haley's The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Learn exactly what happened in this chapter, scene, or section of The Autobiography of Malcolm X and what it means. Perfect for acing essays, tests, and quizzes, as well as for writing lesson plans.

  8. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: Chapter 1 Summary & Analysis

    One night in 1929, which Malcolm calls the "nightmare night," the Black Legion sets their house on fire. Earl shoots his pistol at the arsonists and then directs the family out and to safety. By calling it a "nightmare night," Malcolm underlines the psychological scarring left by this experience.

  9. The Autobiography of Malcolm X Summary

    The Autobiography of Malcolm X is a memoir co-written by Malcolm X and journalist Alex Haley. It was first published in 1965, shortly after Malcolm X's assassination. The book chronicles Malcolm X ...

  10. The Autobiography of Malcolm X

    Malcolm X (born May 19, 1925, Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.—died February 21, 1965, New York, New York) was an African American leader and prominent figure in the Nation of Islam who articulated concepts of race pride and Black nationalism in the early 1960s. After his assassination, the widespread distribution of his life story— The Autobiography ...

  11. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: Chapter 3 Summary & Analysis

    On Ella 's advice, Malcolm sets out to explore and get to know Boston. He first walks around her neighborhood, which the residents refer to as "the Hill" or "the Four Hundred.". The locals there look down on the poorer black people in the "town" area of Roxbury, and Malcolm is amazed at their behavior. He mistakenly believes they ...

  12. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: Symbols

    A summary of Symbols in Malcolm X & Alex Haley's The Autobiography of Malcolm X.  

  13. The Autobiography of Malcolm X

    A detailed description and in-depth analysis of Malcolm as Malcolm X in The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Search all of SparkNotes Search. Suggestions. Use up and down arrows to review and enter to select. A Midsummer Night's Dream A Streetcar Named Desire Frankenstein ...

  14. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: Chapter 19 Summary & Analysis

    Malcolm increasingly finds himself in a "Bermuda triangle" of media coverage. Everything bad happening within America's cities is blamed on him, while all of the messages he sends out are simply swallowed into the void. His righteous anger is seen as just the typical behavior of a stereotypical poor, angry black man.

  15. Malcolm X Biography

    Malcolm X Biography. Malcolm X was born Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska, on May 19, 1925; he dropped the "slave name" Little and adopted the initial X (representing an unknown) when he became a member of the Nation of Islam. Malcolm was the seventh of his father's nine children — three by a previous marriage — and his mother's fourth child.

  16. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: Epilogue Summary & Analysis

    Malcolm is caught off guard by Alex 's proposal for an autobiography. After considering the proposal, he agrees, on the condition that the book focuses on the Nation of Islam, all the proceeds go to supporting the Nation, and that he gets permission from Elijah. After flying out to Phoenix, Alex receives permission from Elijah.

  17. The Autobiography of Malcolm X Book Summary by Malcolm X ...

    1-Page Summary 1-Page Book Summary of The Autobiography of Malcolm X. Published in 1965, The Autobiography of Malcolm X explains how Malcolm X rose from a life of poverty and crime to become a significant leader of the civil rights movement. Malcolm X was a controversial figure—his views were often considered extreme, and they changed radically throughout his life.

  18. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: Chapter 8 Summary & Analysis

    With the narcotics squad, West Indian Archie, and the Italian mob all looking for him, Malcolm feels very trapped. Malcolm remarks early in the autobiography that his mother and his siblings have always had an intuition for impending danger; here, the reader sees that intuition in action. Active Themes. Sammy calls Shorty in Boston and asks him ...

  19. The Autobiography of Malcolm X

    Thanks for exploring this SuperSummary Study Guide of "The Autobiography of Malcolm X" by Malcolm X, Alex Haley. A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions ...