Facing the Race
Uitgelicht
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18,56 |
Naar shop
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56,99 |
Naar shop
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56,99 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
Facing the Race: Racism, Power, and the Struggle for America's FutureNo child is born racist.Prejudice is learned. Fear is taught. Division is inherited.In Facing the Race, the author begins with a childhood encounter that revealed a painful truth: racism does not originate in the hearts of children-it is passed from one generation to the next through families, institutions, political systems, cultural narratives, and historical memory. That lesson becomes the foundation for a powerful examination of how racial inequality has been created, maintained, challenged, and transformed throughout American history.Blending personal experience, historical analysis, political commentary, and social critique, Facing the Race traces the evolution of racism from slavery and Reconstruction to modern debates over education, immigration, media, voting rights, Christian nationalism, diversity initiatives, and democratic governance. The book argues that racism is more than individual prejudice; it is a system of power that adapts to changing times, often operating through policies, institutions, and narratives that appear race-neutral while producing deeply unequal outcomes.Through an exploration of America's historical foundations, the architecture of privilege, the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement, the politics of Black history education, the influence of media, and the rise of contemporary racialized political movements, the book challenges readers to examine the gap between America's democratic ideals and its lived realities.At a time when conversations about race have become increasingly polarized, Facing the Race moves beyond slogans and partisan talking points to ask deeper questions: How does a society built on ideals of equality continue to produce racial inequality?How do media, politics, religion, and education shape our understanding of race and belonging?What lessons from history remain unresolved in the present?And what responsibility does each generation bear in creating a more equitable future?Ultimately, Facing the Race is not simply a book about racism. It is a book about democracy, memory, identity, power, and possibility. It is an invitation to confront uncomfortable truths, challenge inherited assumptions, and imagine a society that more fully reflects its highest ideals.Provocative, deeply researched, and grounded in both history and lived experience, Facing the Race offers readers a framework for understanding one of the most consequential issues in American life-and a roadmap for moving beyond denial toward meaningful change.
Facing the Race: Racism, Power, and the Struggle for America's FutureNo child is born racist.Prejudice is learned. Fear is taught. Division is inherited.In Facing the Race, the author begins with a childhood encounter that revealed a painful truth: racism does not originate in the hearts of children-it is passed from one generation to the next through families, institutions, political systems, cultural narratives, and historical memory. That lesson becomes the foundation for a powerful examination of how racial inequality has been created, maintained, challenged, and transformed throughout American history.Blending personal experience, historical analysis, political commentary, and social critique, Facing the Race traces the evolution of racism from slavery and Reconstruction to modern debates over education, immigration, media, voting rights, Christian nationalism, diversity initiatives, and democratic governance. The book argues that racism is more than individual prejudice; it is a system of power that adapts to changing times, often operating through policies, institutions, and narratives that appear race-neutral while producing deeply unequal outcomes.Through an exploration of America's historical foundations, the architecture of privilege, the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement, the politics of Black history education, the influence of media, and the rise of contemporary racialized political movements, the book challenges readers to examine the gap between America's democratic ideals and its lived realities.At a time when conversations about race have become increasingly polarized, Facing the Race moves beyond slogans and partisan talking points to ask deeper questions: How does a society built on ideals of equality continue to produce racial inequality?How do media, politics, religion, and education shape our understanding of race and belonging?What lessons from history remain unresolved in the present?And what responsibility does each generation bear in creating a more equitable future?Ultimately, Facing the Race is not simply a book about racism. It is a book about democracy, memory, identity, power, and possibility. It is an invitation to confront uncomfortable truths, challenge inherited assumptions, and imagine a society that more fully reflects its highest ideals.Provocative, deeply researched, and grounded in both history and lived experience, Facing the Race offers readers a framework for understanding one of the most consequential issues in American life-and a roadmap for moving beyond denial toward meaningful change.
AmazonPagina's: 346, Paperback, Facing the Race
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