The election of America's first black president has led many to
believe that race is no longer a real obstacle to success and that
remaining racial inequality stems largely from the failure of
minority groups to take personal responsibility for seeking out
opportunities. Often this argument is made in the name of the long
tradition of self-reliance and American individualism. In
"Awakening to Race, " Jack Turner upends this view, arguing that it
expresses not a deep commitment to the values of individualism, but
a narrow understanding of them. Drawing on the works of Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Frederick Douglass, Ralph Ellison,
and James Baldwin, Turner offers an original reconstruction of
democratic individualism in American thought. All these thinkers,
he shows, held that personal responsibility entails a refusal to be
complicit in injustice and a duty to combat the conditions and
structures that support it. At a time when individualism is invoked
as a reason for inaction, Turner makes the individualist tradition
the basis of a bold and impassioned case for race
consciousness--consciousness of the ways that race continues to
constrain opportunity in America. Turner's "new individualism"
becomes the grounds for concerted public action against racial
injustice.
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