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The Man Across Eight Mile (Paperback): D'Andre Walker The Man Across Eight Mile (Paperback)
D'Andre Walker
R315 R281 Discovery Miles 2 810 Save R34 (11%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The Re-Factor (Paperback): Andre Walker, Chris Hill The Re-Factor (Paperback)
Andre Walker, Chris Hill
R483 Discovery Miles 4 830 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Not Only in Blood (Paperback): D'Andre Walker Not Only in Blood (Paperback)
D'Andre Walker
R354 R295 Discovery Miles 2 950 Save R59 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The Burning House - Jim Crow and the Making of Modern America (Hardcover): Anders Walker The Burning House - Jim Crow and the Making of Modern America (Hardcover)
Anders Walker
R912 Discovery Miles 9 120 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A startling and gripping reexamination of the Jim Crow era, as seen through the eyes of some of the most important American writers "Walker has opened up a fresh way of thinking about the intellectual history of the South during the civil-rights movement."-Robert Greene, The Nation In this dramatic reexamination of the Jim Crow South, Anders Walker demonstrates that racial segregation fostered not simply terror and violence, but also diversity, one of our most celebrated ideals. He investigates how prominent intellectuals like Robert Penn Warren, James Baldwin, Eudora Welty, Ralph Ellison, Flannery O'Connor, and Zora Neale Hurston found pluralism in Jim Crow, a legal system that created two worlds, each with its own institutions, traditions, even cultures. The intellectuals discussed in this book all agreed that black culture was resilient, creative, and profound, brutally honest in its assessment of American history. By contrast, James Baldwin likened white culture to a "burning house," a frightening place that endorsed racism and violence to maintain dominance. Why should black Americans exchange their experience for that? Southern whites, meanwhile, saw themselves preserving a rich cultural landscape against the onslaught of mass culture and federal power, a project carried to the highest levels of American law by Supreme Court justice and Virginia native Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Anders Walker shows how a generation of scholars and judges has misinterpreted Powell's definition of diversity in the landmark case Regents v. Bakke, forgetting its Southern origins and weakening it in the process. By resituating the decision in the context of Southern intellectual history, Walker places diversity on a new footing, independent of affirmative action but also free from the constraints currently placed on it by the Supreme Court. With great clarity and insight, he offers a new lens through which to understand the history of civil rights in the United States.

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