Turning Back: The Retreat from Racial Justice in American Thought and PolicyBeacon Press, 2001 M01 16 - 318 páginas Winner of the ASA, Oliver Cox Award for Anti-Racist Scholarship From the author of The Ethnic Myth comes this cogent analysis of how social science has placed a liberal gloss on racism and failed to champion civil rights. From a powerful critique of Gunnar Myrdal's classic An American Dilemma to a new epilogue that dismantles the myth of black progress, Turning Back offers a challenge to liberals as well as conservatives, blacks as well as whites, who have fueled the current backlash by providing a spurious intellectual cover for gutting affirmative action and other policies designed to advance the cause of racial justice. |
Contenido
My Education as a Teacher of Race Relations | 1 |
RACIAL LIBERALISM THE RISE AND FALL OF A PARADIGM | 19 |
An American Dilemma A New Liberal Orthodoxy on Race | 21 |
Paradigm Crisis The Decline of Liberal Orthodoxy | 50 |
The 1960s and the Scholarship of Confrontation | 68 |
THE SCHOLARSHIP OF BACKLASH | 95 |
Backlash Outside and Inside the University | 97 |
The Liberal Retreat from Race during the PostCivil Rights Era | 107 |
The Politics of Memory | 156 |
Affirmative Action and Liberal Capitulation | 164 |
THE ENDURING LEGACY OF SLAVERY | 177 |
Occupational Apartheid and the Myth of the Black Middle Class | 179 |
America Again at the Crossroads | 205 |
Up from Slavery The Myth of Block Progress | 221 |
Notes | 242 |
296 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Turning Back: The Retreat from Racial Justice in American Thought and Policy Stephen Steinberg Sin vista previa disponible - 2001 |
Turning Back: The Retreat from Racial Justice in American Thought and Policy Stephen Steinberg Sin vista previa disponible - 2001 |
Términos y frases comunes
affirmative action African Americans agenda American Dilemma analysis behavior Bell Curve black America Black and White black community black family black middle class Black Progress Blauner Carnegie century Chapter Chicago cial City civil rights movement Commission confront crisis critical culture Daniel Patrick Moynihan decades Democratic discrimination economic employment equality ethnic fact forces ghetto groups Gunnar Myrdal hiring Ibid immigrants industries inequality institutions intellectual issue Jim Crow labor markets major Malcolm X ment million minority moral Moynihan Report Nathan Glazer nation Negro problem Nixon opportunity Oppression in America paradigm Patterson percent political poor poverty programs published quoted race relations racial oppression racism radical Randolph Reconstruction riot scholars sector segregation Significance of Race slavery social science sociology South Southern structures Thernstroms tion University Press Urban victims W. E. B. Du Bois Washington West white liberals William Julius Wilson Wilson workers writes wrote York