Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: White Rage

Full title: White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide
Author: Carol Anderson
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 2
Genres/categories: History, Politics, Non Fiction, Award winners, Sociology

Purchase/research links:
Winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism in 2016.

From the Civil War to our combustible present, acclaimed historian Carol Anderson reframes our continuing conversation about race, chronicling the powerful forces opposed to black progress in America.

As Ferguson, Missouri, erupted in August 2014, and media commentators across the ideological spectrum referred to the angry response of African Americans as "black rage," historian Carol Anderson wrote a remarkable op-ed in the Washington Post showing that this was, instead, "white rage at work. With so much attention on the flames," she writes, "everyone had ignored the kindling."

Since 1865 and the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment, every time African Americans have made advances towards full participation in our democracy, white reaction has fueled a deliberate and relentless rollback of their gains. The end of the Civil War and Reconstruction was greeted with the Black Codes and Jim Crow; the Supreme Court's landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision was met with the shutting down of public schools throughout the South while taxpayer dollars financed segregated white private schools; the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 triggered a coded but powerful response, the so-called Southern Strategy and the War on Drugs that disenfranchised millions of African Americans while propelling presidents Nixon and Reagan into the White House.

Carefully linking these and other historical flashpoints when social progress for African Americans was countered by deliberate and cleverly crafted opposition, Anderson pulls back the veil that has long covered actions made in the name of protecting democracy, fiscal responsibility, or protection against fraud, rendering visible the long lineage of white rage. Compelling and dramatic in the unimpeachable history it relates, White Rage will add an important new dimension to the national conversation about race in America.
Similar books:

One Person, No Vote
by Carol Anderson

Sundown Towns
by James W. Loewen

Stamped from the Beginning
by Ibram X. Kendi

How to Be an Antiracist
by Ibram X. Kendi

The New Jim Crow
by Michelle Alexander

Faces At The Bottom Of The Well
by Derrick Bell

White Fragility
by Robin DiAngelo

Dying of Whiteness
by Jonathan M. Metzl

White Guilt
by Shelby Steele

The Color of Law
by Richard Rothstein

Tears We Cannot Stop
by Michael Eric Dyson

Black Like Me
by John Howard Griffin

Blood at the Root
by Patrick Phillips

We Were Eight Years in Power
by Ta-Nehisi Coates

Race Matters
by Cornel West

An American Dilemma
by Gunnar Myrdal

Fantasyland
by Kurt Andersen

Regulating the Poor
by Frances Fox Piven

America
by Chris Hedges

A People's History Of The United States
by Howard Zinn