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Alex Haley, author of Roots: The Saga of an American Family and The Autobiography of Malcolm X, dies of a heart attack in Seattle, Washington.
1992 (Feb 10)
Alex Haley, author of Roots: The Saga of an American Family and The Autobiography of Malcolm X, died of a heart attack in Seattle, Washington. He had been working on a literary project about his hometown of Henning, Tennessee. The first Black American to win literary fame for the delineation of his family history, Haley published Roots during America's bicentennial in 1976. In the book, he brought his family's history to life when he traced his ancestry back to its West African origins. Haley wrote the book after extensive genealogical research that spanned three continents. In 1977, however, Margaret Walker charged that Roots plagiarized her novel, Jubilee, and, later, Harold Courlander claimed that it plagiarized his novel, The African. Courlander received a settlement after several passages in Roots were found to be almost verbatim from The African. Haley claimed that researchers had given him this material without properly citing the source. Roots won a Pulitzer Prize and, a year later, became the basis of one of television's most popular miniseries. The eight-part miniseries, which was viewed by more than 130 million people, provided a frank depiction of the country's formative years and the slavery era. It also reminded viewers that the birth of the nation was not without severe moral complications. Haley was known for his exhaustive research and attention to detail, which are evident in both Roots and The Autobiography of Malcolm X, published in 1965 after a year of intense interviews with the Black Nationalist leader. It has since become the inspiration behind Black filmmaker Spike Lee's biographical film of Malcolm X. Haley also contributed stories, articles, and interviews to Playboy, Harpers, the Atlantic Monthly, and Reader's Digest.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.