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Erasing Racism - The Survival of the American Nation (Paperback, Revised & Expanded Ed)
Loot Price: R391
Discovery Miles 3 910
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Erasing Racism - The Survival of the American Nation (Paperback, Revised & Expanded Ed)
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Loot Price R391
Discovery Miles 3 910
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Did the election of Barack Obama to be President of the United
States signal real progress in bridging America's longstanding
racial divide? In this profound study of systemic racism, Molefi
Kete Asante, one of our leading scholars of African American
history and culture, discusses the greatest source of frustration
and anger among African Americans in recent decades: what he calls
"the wall of ignorance" that attempts to hide the long history of
racial injustice from public consciousness. This is most evident in
each race's differing perspectives on racial matters. Though most
whites view racism as a thing of the past, a social problem largely
solved by the civil rights movement, blacks continue to experience
racism in many areas of social life: encounters with the police;
the practice of red lining in housing; difficulties in getting bank
loans, mortgages, and insurance policies; and glaring disparities
in health care, educational opportunities, unemployment levels, and
incarceration rates. Though such problems are not expressions of
the overt racism of legal segregation and lynch mobs--what most
whites probably think of when they hear the word "racism"--their
negative effect on black Americans is almost as pernicious. Such
daily experiences create a lingering feeling of resentment that
percolates in a slow boil till some event triggers an outburst of
rage.
Asante argues that America cannot long continue as a cohesive
society under these conditions. As we embark upon new leadership
under America's first African American president, he urges more
public focus on redressing the wrongs of the past and their
continuing legacy. Above all, he thinks that Americans must
seriously consider some system of reparations to deal with both
past and present injustices, an apology, and our own
truth-and-reconciliation committee that addresses both the history
of slavery and present-day racism. Only in this way, he feels, can
we ever hope to heal the racial divide that never seems to be
erased. This is a powerful, deeply perceptive analysis of a crucial
social problem by one of America's leading thinkers on race.
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