Ethnic groups and multicultural studies Books
American Psychological Association Substance Use Disorders in Underserved Ethnic and
Book SynopsisThis book surveys the historical context of substance use disorders in communities of color and offers strategies to support and empower them.Table of ContentsContributors Introduction to Substance Use Disorders in Diverse Ethnoracial Groups: Understanding How We Got HereEdward C. Chang and Christina A. DowneyPart I. Overview of Cultural Competence Chapter 1. The Need for Cultural Competence in Understanding and Intervening With Substance Use DisordersChristina A. DowneyPart II. Substance Use in Black/African American Communities Chapter 2. Scope and Historical Origins of Substance Use Disorders Among Black American CommunitiesTamika C. B. Zapolski, Alia Rowe, Rieanna S. McPhie, and Maney Darby Chapter 3. Culturally Competent Substance Abuse Treatment for Black American CommunitiesMichelle L. Redmond, Rhonda K. Lewis, Tasha Parker, Rosalind Canare, Dyan Dickens, and Stormy Malone Chapter 4. Preventing Substance Use in Black Youth: What Is Available and What Is Missing?A. Kathleen Burlew, Brittany D. Miller-Roenigk, Caravella McCuistian, Randi D. Burlew, and Bridgette J. PeteetPart III. Substance Use in Asian American/Pacific Islander Communities Chapter 5. Substance Use Trends and Patterns Among Asian American and Pacific Islander CommunitiesAthena Park, Aylin Kaya, Jennifer King, Lauren Pandes-Carter, and Derek Kenji Iwamoto Chapter 6. Culturally Competent Assessment and Treatment of Substance Use Disorders for Asian American CommunitiesGloria Wong-Padoongpatt, Anthony King, and Nolan Zane Chapter 7. Prevention of Substance Use Disorders in Asian American Adolescents: A Review of Family-Based InterventionsYoonsun Choi, Michael Park, Dina Drankus Pekelnicky, Mina Lee, and Tae Yeun KimPart IV. Substance Use in Latino/Latina/Latinx/Hispanic Communities Chapter 8. Culturally Competent Assessment and Treatment of Substance Use Disorders in Latino American CommunitiesLuz M. López and Jocelyn Melian Chapter 9. Prevention of Substance Use Disorders in Latino/Latina American CommunitiesAlyssa Lozano, Alejandra Fernandez, Yannine Estrada, and Guillermo PradoPart V. Substance Use in Native American/Alaska Native Communities Chapter 10. Scope and Historical Origins of Substance Use Disorders Among Native American CommunitiesTeresa (Tessa) Evans-Campbell and Karina Walters Chapter 11. Assessment and Treatment of Substance Use Disorders in American Indian/Alaska Native Communities: A Cultural and Practice Review and Call for DevelopmentLaurence Armand French and Christina A. Downey Chapter 12. Interventions for Substance Use Disorders in American Indian/Alaska Native CommunitiesEric F. Wagner, John Lowe, and Julie Ann BaldwinPart VI. Our Multicultural, Multiethnic Future and Substance Use Disorder Chapter 13. Integrating a Multicultural, Multiethnic Perspective Into Substance Use Training: Preparing Clinicians for the FutureChristina A. Downey and Edward C. Chang Index About the Editors
£66.60
Temple University Press,U.S. Savage Portrayals
Book SynopsisCasts new light on this famous crime and its far-reaching consequences for the wrongly accused and the justice system.Trade Review"Byfield brings bifocal vision to her analysis of media treatment of the Central Park Jogger story, which she covered in her first career as a journalist for the New York Daily News... From her current perspective as a sociologist, Byfield reexamines the horrific event in light of after-acquired evidence and scholarly methodology, particularly content analysis of news coverage, and she tells a revised story in which issues of race, class, and media bias taint the justice system. VERDICT: A chilling, ultimately instructive portrayal of savage injustice " - Library JournalTable of ContentsAcknowledgments 1 Reconnecting New Forms of Inequality to their Roots 2 A Jogger Is Raped in Central Park 3 The Position of the Black Man in the Cult of White Womanhood 4 Salvaging the “Savage”: A Racial Frame that Refuses to Die 5 A Participant Observes How Content Emerges 6 The “Facts” Emerge to Convict the Innocent 7 The Case Falls Apart: Media’s Brief Mea Culpa 8 Selling Savage Portrayals: Young Black and Latino Males in the Carceral State 9 They Didn’t Do It! Notes References Index
£72.00
Temple University Press,U.S. Savage Portrayals
Book SynopsisCasts new light on this famous crime and its far-reaching consequences for the wrongly accused and the justice system.Trade Review"Byfield brings bifocal vision to her analysis of media treatment of the Central Park Jogger story, which she covered in her first career as a journalist for the New York Daily News... From her current perspective as a sociologist, Byfield reexamines the horrific event in light of after-acquired evidence and scholarly methodology, particularly content analysis of news coverage, and she tells a revised story in which issues of race, class, and media bias taint the justice system. VERDICT: A chilling, ultimately instructive portrayal of savage injustice " - Library JournalTable of ContentsAcknowledgments 1 Reconnecting New Forms of Inequality to their Roots 2 A Jogger Is Raped in Central Park 3 The Position of the Black Man in the Cult of White Womanhood 4 Salvaging the “Savage”: A Racial Frame that Refuses to Die 5 A Participant Observes How Content Emerges 6 The “Facts” Emerge to Convict the Innocent 7 The Case Falls Apart: Media’s Brief Mea Culpa 8 Selling Savage Portrayals: Young Black and Latino Males in the Carceral State 9 They Didn’t Do It! Notes References Index
£22.49
Temple University Press,U.S. Just Who Loses
Book SynopsisA rich vein of data that lays bare pervasive discriminatory environments and their systemic consequences for targets and non-targets of discriminationTable of ContentsList of Tables and Figures Acknowledgments Introduction: Evidently, Too 1 Effects of Discrimination in the United States 2 Biological Explanations of Gender and Racial Inequality in the United States 3 Socialization and Cultural Difference Explanations of Race and Gender Inequality in the United States 4 The Comparative Measurement of Expected Exposure to Discrimination 5 Education and Discrimination 6 Opportunity to Work and Discrimination 7 Job Quality and Discrimination 8 Poverty, Earnings, and Discrimination 9 Mortality and Discrimination 10 Just Who Loses? References Index
£61.20
Temple University Press,U.S. Look A White
Book SynopsisFrom a celebrated scholar on race, a book on ways of seeing, and seeing through, whitenessTrade Review"Yancy shares his experience as a black male philosophy professor teaching topics on race to white students. He very effectively uses a quasi-autobiographical narrative to situate various issues regarding race within the classroom, which he takes to be a model of racial discourse that mirrors American society... Summing Up: Recommended." Choice, December 2012 "George Yancy's Look, A White! Is not an introductory book, but its rich offering of examples of white privilege from university settings would make it particularly attractive to college students, as well as faculty...a beneficial addition to the growing field of critical philosophy of race."- Radical PhilosophyTable of ContentsForeword Racist Onions and Etchings; Naomi Zack; Acknowledgements; Introduction Flipping the Script; 1 Looking at Whiteness: Finding Myself Much Like a Mugger; at a Boardwalk's End; 2 Looking at Whiteness: Subverting White Academic Spaces; through the Pedagogical Perspective of bell hooks; 3 Looking at Whiteness: The Colonial Semiotics in Kamau; Brathwaite's Reading of The Tempest; 4 Looking at Whiteness: Whiting Up and Blacking Out in; White Chicks; 5 Looking at Whiteness: Loving Wisdom and Playing; with Danger; 6 Looking at Whiteness: Tarrying with the Embedded and; Opaque White Racist Self; Index; About the Author.
£61.20
Temple University Press,U.S. Speaking of Race and Class
Book SynopsisA sequel to the insightful Race and Class Matters at an Elite College that examines the challenges of diversity from freshman orientation to graduationTrade Review"Eye-opening.... The extensive and well-edited interview material gives students a primary voice.... This study teases out the aspects of campus life in which the intersection of race and class may be relevant.... Aries makes a compelling case for universities to manage the formal and informal learning environment on campus from a diversity perspective well beyond the admissions process."-- Publishers Weekly starred reviewTable of ContentsPreface Acknowledgments 1 Race and Class on Campus: Four Students' Stories 2 Moving in and the Challenges of Class 3 Bridging Two Worlds 4 Racial Insults 5 Black on Black 6 Black and White: Seeing Race Anew 7 Haves and Have-Nots: Seeing Class Anew 8 Where We Are 9 Where Do We Go from Here? Appendix A: Online Survey Measures Appendix B: Interview Questions Notes References Index
£64.60
Temple University Press,U.S. Speaking of Race and Class
Book SynopsisA sequel to the insightful Race and Class Matters at an Elite College that examines the challenges of diversity from freshman orientation to graduationTrade Review"Eye-opening.... The extensive and well-edited interview material gives students a primary voice.... This study teases out the aspects of campus life in which the intersection of race and class may be relevant.... Aries makes a compelling case for universities to manage the formal and informal learning environment on campus from a diversity perspective well beyond the admissions process."-- Publishers Weekly starred reviewTable of ContentsPreface Acknowledgments 1 Race and Class on Campus: Four Students' Stories 2 Moving in and the Challenges of Class 3 Bridging Two Worlds 4 Racial Insults 5 Black on Black 6 Black and White: Seeing Race Anew 7 Haves and Have-Nots: Seeing Class Anew 8 Where We Are 9 Where Do We Go from Here? Appendix A: Online Survey Measures Appendix B: Interview Questions Notes References Index
£22.49
Temple University Press,U.S. Illegal Migrations and the Huckleberry Finn
Book SynopsisIf you knew a runaway slave or an undocumented immigrant, would you tell?Trade Review"Park proposes a unique and innovative way to approach the quagmire of immigration reform. He uses the framework that Mark Twain used when presenting the dilemma of what is the proper response to a runaway slave and a young abandoned boy. It is Park's contention that there is much to be learned from comparing the current problems of illegal immigrants with those of fugitive slaves in antebellum America... He finds interesting linkages between the past mistreatment of people of color and what is happening today. The author pays some attention to the legal, educational, moral, and labor repercussions of the treatment of 'illegals.' Park's work is timely, well written, and extensively documented. It should find a wide audience among academics and the general population. Summing Up: Recommended."--Choice, January 2014Table of ContentsPart I STATUS AND ILLEGALITY IN AMERICAN PUBLIC LAW AND CULTURE 1 The Huckleberry Finn Problem2 Race, Law, and Personhood in Huckleberry FinnPart II THE COMPANY OF OTHERS 3 Slavery and Wage Slavery4 Illegal Workers5 Immigrant Activism in the Shadow of LawPart III GETTING AN EDUCATION 6 The Bread of Knowledge7 Race, Immigration, and the Promise of Equality8 Undocumented and UnafraidPart IV UNLAWFUL MIGRATIONS IN AMERICAN LAW AND SOCIETY 9 Utopian Visions and the Unlawful OtherAcknowledgmentsNotesSelected Books Cited Index
£64.60
Temple University Press,U.S. Critical Race Theory
Book SynopsisA significant revision of a classroom mainstay for the twenty-first centuryTrade ReviewPraise for the Second Edition: "[A]n important resource for those who are willing to invest time and energy in trying to understand the extraordinarily complicated ways race and racism function in this country, and the ways those dynamics spill over into many other areas." The Diversity FactorTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionSuggested ReadingsPART I CRITIQUE OF LIBERALISM1 After We’re Gone: Prudent Speculations on America in a Postracial Epoch • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.2 The Chronicles, My Grandfather’s Stories, and Immigration Law: The Slave Traders Chronicle as Racial History • Michael A. Olivas3 The New Racial Preferences • Devon W. Carbado and Cheryl I. Harris4 When the First Quail Calls: Multiple Consciousness as Jurisprudential Method • Mari J. Matsuda5 A Critique of “Our Constitution is Color-Blind” • Neil Gotanda6 Liberal McCarthyism and the Origins of Critical Race Theory • Richard Delgado7 Forbidden Conversations on Race, Privacy, and Community • Charles R. Lawrence IIIFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART II STORYTELLING, COUNTERSTORYTELLING, AND NAMING ONE'S OWN REALITY8 Property Rights in Whiteness: Their Legal Legacy, Their Economic Costs • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.9 Storytelling for Oppositionists and Others: A Plea for Narrative • Richard Delgado10 The Richmond Narratives • Thomas Ross11 Translating Yonnondio by Precedent and Evidence: The Mashpee Indian Case • Gerald Torres and Kathryn Milun12 Alchemical Notes: Reconstructing Ideals from Deconstructed Rights • Patricia J. Williams13 A Furious Kinship: Critical Race Theory and the Hip-Hop Nation • andré douglas pond cummingsFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART III REVISIONIST INTERPRETATIONS OF HISTORY AND CIVIL RIGHTS PROGRESS14 Documents of Barbarism: The Contemporary Legacy of European Racism and Colonialism in the Narrative Traditions of Federal Indian Law • Robert A. Williams, Jr.15 Desegregation as a Cold War Imperative • Mary L. Dudziak16 Liberal McCarthyism: How Four Radical Professors Lost Their Jobs and How Their Displacement Contributed to the Dissemination of Critical Thought • Richard Delgado17 The “Caucasian Cloak ”: Mexican Americans and the Politics of Whiteness in the Twentieth-Century Southwest • Ariela J. Gross18 Did the First Justice Harlan Have a Black Brother? • James W. GordonFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART IV CRITICAL UNDERSTANDINGS OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCE UNDERPINNINGS OF RACE AND RACISM19 Words That Wound: A Tort Action for Racial Insults, Epithets, and Name-Calling • Richard Delgado20 Law as Microagression • Peggy C. Davis21 Implicit Bias, Election 2008, and the Myth of a Postracial America • Gregory S. Parks and Jeffrey J. Rachlinski22 Trojan Horses of Race • Jerry Kang23 Working Identity • Devon W. Carbado and Mitu Gulati24 The Social Construction of Race • Ian F. Haney López25 Cracking the Egg: Which Came First—Stigma or Affirmative Action? • Angela Onwuachi-Willig, Emily Houh, and Mary CampbellFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART V CRIME26 Race Ipsa Loquitur: Of Reasonable Racists, Intelligent Bayesians, and Involuntary Negrophobes • Jody D. Armour27 The New Jim Crow • Michelle Alexander28 Racially Based Jury Nullification: Black power in the Criminal Justice System • Paul Butler29 Race and Self-Defense: Toward a Normative Conception of Reasonableness • Cynthia Kwei Yung LeeFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART VI STRUCTURAL DETERMINISM30 Serving Two Masters: Integration Ideals and Client Interests in School Desegregation Litigation • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.31 The Id, the Ego, and Equal Protection: Reckoning with Unconscious Racism • Charles R. Lawrence III32 Images of the Outsider in American Law and Culture: Can Free Expression Remedy Systemic Social Ills? • Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic33 Race and the U.S.-Mexican Border: Tracing the Trajectories of Conquest • Juan F. PereaFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART VII RACE, SEX, CLASS, AND THEIR INTERSECTIONS34 Race and Essentialism in Feminist Legal Theory • Angela P. Harris35 A Hair Piece: Perspectives on the Intersection of Race and Gender • Paulette M. Caldwell36 From Practice to Theory, or What Is a White Woman Anyway? • Catharine A. MacKinnon37 The Employer Preference for the Subservient Worker and the Making of the Brown-Collar Workplace • Leticia M. SaucedoFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART VIII ESSENTIALISM AND ANTIESSENTIALISM38 “The Black Community,” Its Lawbreakers, and a Politics of Identification • Regina Austin39 Traces of the Master Narrative in the Story of African American–Korean American Conflict: How We Constructed “Los Angeles” • Lisa C. Ikemoto40 Obscuring the Importance of Race: The Implication of Making Comparisons Between Racism and Sexism (or Other -isms)• Trina Grillo and Stephanie M. Wildman41 A House Divided: The Invisibility of the Multiracial Family • Angela Onwuachi-Willig and Jacob Willig-OnwuachiFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART IX GAY-LEBSIAN QUEER ISSUES42 Gendered Inequality • Elvia R. Arriola43 Sexual Politics and Social Change • Darren Lenard Hutchinson44 Racing the Closet • Russell K. Robinson From the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART X BEYOND THE BLACK-WHITE BINARY45 The Black-White Binary Paradigm of Race • Juan F. Perea46 Toward an Asian American Legal Scholarship: Critical Race Theory, Poststructuralism, and Narrative Space • Robert S. Chang47 Race and Erasure: The Salience of Race to Latinos/as • Ian F. Haney López48 Mexican Americans and Whiteness • George A. Martinez49 A Rage Shared by Law: Post–September 11 Racial Violence as Crimes of Passion • Muneer I. Ahmad50 In Defense of the Black-White Binary: Reclaiming a Tradition of Civil Rights Scholarship • Roy L. Brooks and Kirsten Widner51 Racial Classification in America: Where Do We Go from Here? • Kenneth PrewittFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART XI CULTURAL NATIONALISM AND SEPARATISM52 Rodrigo’s Chronicle • Richard Delgado53 Much Respect: Toward a Hip-Hop Theory of Punishment • Paul Butler54 Legal Violence and the Chicano Movement • Ian F. Haney López55 Demise of the Talented Tenth: The Increasing Underrepresentation of Ascendant Blacks at Selective Higher Education Institutions • Kevin Brown and Jeannine Bell56 Law as a Eurocentric Enterprise • Kenneth B. NunnFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART XII INTERGROUP RELATIONS57 Embracing the Tar Baby: Lat-Crit Theory and the Sticky Mess of Race • Leslie G. Espinoza and Angela P. Harris58 Our Next Race Question: The Uneasiness Between Blacks and Latinos • Jorge Klor de Alva, Earl Shorris, and Cornel West59 Afro-Mexicans and the Chicano Movement: The Unknown Story • Tanya Katerí Hernández60 Beyond Racial Identity Politics: Toward a Liberation Theory for Multicultural Democracy • Manning Marable61 Rethinking Alliances: Agency, Responsibility, and Interracial Justice • Eric K. YamamotoFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XIII LEGAL INSTITUTIONS, CRITICAL PEDAGOGY, AND MINORITIES IN THE LAW62 The Civil Rights Chronicles: The Chronicle of the DeVine Gift • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.63 The Imperial Scholar: Reflections on a Review of Civil Rights Literature • Richard Delgado64 Who is Excellent? • Mari J. Matsuda65 Complimentary Discrimination and Complementary Discrimination in Faculty Hiring • Angela Onwuachi-WilligFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XIV CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM66 Stealing Away: Black Women, Outlaw Culture, and the Rhetoric of Rights • Monica J. Evans67 Máscaras, Trenzas, y Greñas: (Un)masking the Self While (Un)Braiding Latina Stories and Legal Discourse • Margaret E. Montoya68 Converging Stereotypes in Racialized Sexual Harassment: Where the Model Minority Meets Suzie Wong • Sumi K. Cho69 Of Woman Born: Courage and Strength to Survive in the Maquiladoras of Reynosa and Río Bravo, Tamaulipas • Elvia Rosales ArriolaFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XV CRITICISM AND SELF-ANALYSIS70 Racial Critiques of Legal Academia • Randall L. Kennedy71 Derrick Bell—Race and Class: The Dilemma of Liberal Reform • Alan D. Freeman72 Telling Stories Out of School: An Essay on Legal Narratives • Daniel A. Farber and Suzanna Sherry73 A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Action in American Law Schools • Richard H. SanderFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XVI CRITICAL RACE PRAXIS74 Fidelity to Community: A Defense of Community Lawyering • Anthony V. Alfieri75 The Work We Know So Little About • Gerald P. López76 Making the Invisible Visible: The Garment Industry’s Dirty Laundry • Julie A. Su77 Vampires Anonymous and Critical Race Practice • Robert A. Williams, Jr.From the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XVII CRITICAL WHITE STUDIES78 White by Law • Ian F. Haney López79 Innocence and Affirmative Action • Thomas Ross80 Language and Silence: Making Systems of Privilege Visible • Stephanie M. Wildman with Adrienne D. Davis81 White Latinos • Ian F. Haney López82 Rodrigo’s Portent: California and the Coming Neocolonial Order • Richard DelgadoFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsContributorsIndex
£70.55
Temple University Press,U.S. Critical Race Theory
Book SynopsisA significant revision of a classroom mainstay for the twenty-first centuryTrade ReviewPraise for the Second Edition: "[A]n important resource for those who are willing to invest time and energy in trying to understand the extraordinarily complicated ways race and racism function in this country, and the ways those dynamics spill over into many other areas." The Diversity FactorTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionSuggested ReadingsPART I CRITIQUE OF LIBERALISM1 After We’re Gone: Prudent Speculations on America in a Postracial Epoch • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.2 The Chronicles, My Grandfather’s Stories, and Immigration Law: The Slave Traders Chronicle as Racial History • Michael A. Olivas3 The New Racial Preferences • Devon W. Carbado and Cheryl I. Harris4 When the First Quail Calls: Multiple Consciousness as Jurisprudential Method • Mari J. Matsuda5 A Critique of “Our Constitution is Color-Blind” • Neil Gotanda6 Liberal McCarthyism and the Origins of Critical Race Theory • Richard Delgado7 Forbidden Conversations on Race, Privacy, and Community • Charles R. Lawrence IIIFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART II STORYTELLING, COUNTERSTORYTELLING, AND NAMING ONE'S OWN REALITY8 Property Rights in Whiteness: Their Legal Legacy, Their Economic Costs • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.9 Storytelling for Oppositionists and Others: A Plea for Narrative • Richard Delgado10 The Richmond Narratives • Thomas Ross11 Translating Yonnondio by Precedent and Evidence: The Mashpee Indian Case • Gerald Torres and Kathryn Milun12 Alchemical Notes: Reconstructing Ideals from Deconstructed Rights • Patricia J. Williams13 A Furious Kinship: Critical Race Theory and the Hip-Hop Nation • andré douglas pond cummingsFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART III REVISIONIST INTERPRETATIONS OF HISTORY AND CIVIL RIGHTS PROGRESS14 Documents of Barbarism: The Contemporary Legacy of European Racism and Colonialism in the Narrative Traditions of Federal Indian Law • Robert A. Williams, Jr.15 Desegregation as a Cold War Imperative • Mary L. Dudziak16 Liberal McCarthyism: How Four Radical Professors Lost Their Jobs and How Their Displacement Contributed to the Dissemination of Critical Thought • Richard Delgado17 The “Caucasian Cloak ”: Mexican Americans and the Politics of Whiteness in the Twentieth-Century Southwest • Ariela J. Gross18 Did the First Justice Harlan Have a Black Brother? • James W. GordonFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART IV CRITICAL UNDERSTANDINGS OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCE UNDERPINNINGS OF RACE AND RACISM19 Words That Wound: A Tort Action for Racial Insults, Epithets, and Name-Calling • Richard Delgado20 Law as Microagression • Peggy C. Davis21 Implicit Bias, Election 2008, and the Myth of a Postracial America • Gregory S. Parks and Jeffrey J. Rachlinski22 Trojan Horses of Race • Jerry Kang23 Working Identity • Devon W. Carbado and Mitu Gulati24 The Social Construction of Race • Ian F. Haney López25 Cracking the Egg: Which Came First—Stigma or Affirmative Action? • Angela Onwuachi-Willig, Emily Houh, and Mary CampbellFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART V CRIME26 Race Ipsa Loquitur: Of Reasonable Racists, Intelligent Bayesians, and Involuntary Negrophobes • Jody D. Armour27 The New Jim Crow • Michelle Alexander28 Racially Based Jury Nullification: Black power in the Criminal Justice System • Paul Butler29 Race and Self-Defense: Toward a Normative Conception of Reasonableness • Cynthia Kwei Yung LeeFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART VI STRUCTURAL DETERMINISM30 Serving Two Masters: Integration Ideals and Client Interests in School Desegregation Litigation • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.31 The Id, the Ego, and Equal Protection: Reckoning with Unconscious Racism • Charles R. Lawrence III32 Images of the Outsider in American Law and Culture: Can Free Expression Remedy Systemic Social Ills? • Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic33 Race and the U.S.-Mexican Border: Tracing the Trajectories of Conquest • Juan F. PereaFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART VII RACE, SEX, CLASS, AND THEIR INTERSECTIONS34 Race and Essentialism in Feminist Legal Theory • Angela P. Harris35 A Hair Piece: Perspectives on the Intersection of Race and Gender • Paulette M. Caldwell36 From Practice to Theory, or What Is a White Woman Anyway? • Catharine A. MacKinnon37 The Employer Preference for the Subservient Worker and the Making of the Brown-Collar Workplace • Leticia M. SaucedoFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART VIII ESSENTIALISM AND ANTIESSENTIALISM38 “The Black Community,” Its Lawbreakers, and a Politics of Identification • Regina Austin39 Traces of the Master Narrative in the Story of African American–Korean American Conflict: How We Constructed “Los Angeles” • Lisa C. Ikemoto40 Obscuring the Importance of Race: The Implication of Making Comparisons Between Racism and Sexism (or Other -isms)• Trina Grillo and Stephanie M. Wildman41 A House Divided: The Invisibility of the Multiracial Family • Angela Onwuachi-Willig and Jacob Willig-OnwuachiFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART IX GAY-LEBSIAN QUEER ISSUES42 Gendered Inequality • Elvia R. Arriola43 Sexual Politics and Social Change • Darren Lenard Hutchinson44 Racing the Closet • Russell K. Robinson From the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART X BEYOND THE BLACK-WHITE BINARY45 The Black-White Binary Paradigm of Race • Juan F. Perea46 Toward an Asian American Legal Scholarship: Critical Race Theory, Poststructuralism, and Narrative Space • Robert S. Chang47 Race and Erasure: The Salience of Race to Latinos/as • Ian F. Haney López48 Mexican Americans and Whiteness • George A. Martinez49 A Rage Shared by Law: Post–September 11 Racial Violence as Crimes of Passion • Muneer I. Ahmad50 In Defense of the Black-White Binary: Reclaiming a Tradition of Civil Rights Scholarship • Roy L. Brooks and Kirsten Widner51 Racial Classification in America: Where Do We Go from Here? • Kenneth PrewittFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART XI CULTURAL NATIONALISM AND SEPARATISM52 Rodrigo’s Chronicle • Richard Delgado53 Much Respect: Toward a Hip-Hop Theory of Punishment • Paul Butler54 Legal Violence and the Chicano Movement • Ian F. Haney López55 Demise of the Talented Tenth: The Increasing Underrepresentation of Ascendant Blacks at Selective Higher Education Institutions • Kevin Brown and Jeannine Bell56 Law as a Eurocentric Enterprise • Kenneth B. NunnFrom the Editors: Issues and CommentsSuggested ReadingsPART XII INTERGROUP RELATIONS57 Embracing the Tar Baby: Lat-Crit Theory and the Sticky Mess of Race • Leslie G. Espinoza and Angela P. Harris58 Our Next Race Question: The Uneasiness Between Blacks and Latinos • Jorge Klor de Alva, Earl Shorris, and Cornel West59 Afro-Mexicans and the Chicano Movement: The Unknown Story • Tanya Katerí Hernández60 Beyond Racial Identity Politics: Toward a Liberation Theory for Multicultural Democracy • Manning Marable61 Rethinking Alliances: Agency, Responsibility, and Interracial Justice • Eric K. YamamotoFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XIII LEGAL INSTITUTIONS, CRITICAL PEDAGOGY, AND MINORITIES IN THE LAW62 The Civil Rights Chronicles: The Chronicle of the DeVine Gift • Derrick A. Bell, Jr.63 The Imperial Scholar: Reflections on a Review of Civil Rights Literature • Richard Delgado64 Who is Excellent? • Mari J. Matsuda65 Complimentary Discrimination and Complementary Discrimination in Faculty Hiring • Angela Onwuachi-WilligFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XIV CRITICAL RACE FEMINISM66 Stealing Away: Black Women, Outlaw Culture, and the Rhetoric of Rights • Monica J. Evans67 Máscaras, Trenzas, y Greñas: (Un)masking the Self While (Un)Braiding Latina Stories and Legal Discourse • Margaret E. Montoya68 Converging Stereotypes in Racialized Sexual Harassment: Where the Model Minority Meets Suzie Wong • Sumi K. Cho69 Of Woman Born: Courage and Strength to Survive in the Maquiladoras of Reynosa and Río Bravo, Tamaulipas • Elvia Rosales ArriolaFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XV CRITICISM AND SELF-ANALYSIS70 Racial Critiques of Legal Academia • Randall L. Kennedy71 Derrick Bell—Race and Class: The Dilemma of Liberal Reform • Alan D. Freeman72 Telling Stories Out of School: An Essay on Legal Narratives • Daniel A. Farber and Suzanna Sherry73 A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Action in American Law Schools • Richard H. SanderFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XVI CRITICAL RACE PRAXIS74 Fidelity to Community: A Defense of Community Lawyering • Anthony V. Alfieri75 The Work We Know So Little About • Gerald P. López76 Making the Invisible Visible: The Garment Industry’s Dirty Laundry • Julie A. Su77 Vampires Anonymous and Critical Race Practice • Robert A. Williams, Jr.From the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsPART XVII CRITICAL WHITE STUDIES78 White by Law • Ian F. Haney López79 Innocence and Affirmative Action • Thomas Ross80 Language and Silence: Making Systems of Privilege Visible • Stephanie M. Wildman with Adrienne D. Davis81 White Latinos • Ian F. Haney López82 Rodrigo’s Portent: California and the Coming Neocolonial Order • Richard DelgadoFrom the Editors: Issues and Comments Suggested ReadingsContributorsIndex
£42.30
Temple University Press,U.S. Vanishing Eden
Book Synopsis For many whites, desegregation initially felt like an attack on their community. But how has the process of racial change affected whites’ understanding of community and race? In Vanishing Eden, Michael Maly and Heather Dalmage provide an intriguing analysis of the experiences and memories of whites who lived in Chicago neighborhoods experiencing racial change during the 1950s through the 1980s. They pay particular attention to examining how young people made sense of what was occurring, and how this experience impacted their lives. Using a blend of urban studies and whiteness studies, the authors examine how racial solidarity and whiteness were created and maintained—often in subtle and unreflective ways. Vanishing Eden also considers how race is central to the ways social institutions such as housing, education, and employment function. Surveying the shifting social, economic, and racial contexts, the authors explore how race and class at local
£22.79
Temple University Press,U.S. Not from Here
Book SynopsisWhen Allan Johnson asked his dying father where he wanted his ashes to be placed, his father repliedwithout hesitationthat it made no difference to him at all. In his poignant, powerful memoir, Not from Here, Johnson embarks on an extraordinary, 2,000-mile journey across the Upper Midwest and Northern Plains to find the place where his father's ashes belonged. As a white man with Norwegian and English lineage, Johnson explores both America and the question of belonging to a place whose history holds the continuing legacy of the displacement, dispossession, and genocide of Native peoples. More than a personal narrative, Not from Here illuminates the national silence around unresolved questions of accountability, race, and identity politics, and the dilemma of how to take responsibility for a past we did not create. Johnson's storyabout the past living in the present; of redemption, fate, family, tribe, and nation; of love and griefraises profound questions about belonging, identTrade Review"What it means to be white, what it means to be American, and what it means to be from a place and to belong to it are questions that Johnson raises throughout the book. He is painfully aware that as a descendant of those who took the land from others, dispossessing and displacing them, he is today the beneficiary of acts he did not perform. . . . [T]hose expecting a son's gentle memoir will be in for a surprise."—Kirkus Reviews"Not from Here is a fascinating journey into filiality, heritage, and the heart of this American land. It is a journey worth taking and a story well told." —Kent Nerburn, author of Letters to My Son, Neither Wolf nor Dog, and Chief Joseph and the Flight of the Nez Perce "If those two great existential questions—Who am I? and Where am I from?—are linked, how are those with transient upbringings in our amnesiatic, immigrant-settled society to answer them? In Not from Here, Allan Johnson takes a road trip on the American plains to try to find out, haunted by his globe-trotting father's ashes in the trunk and the legacy of Euro-American conquest staring at him through the windshield." —Colin Woodard, author of American Nations and The Lobster Coast
£18.99
Temple University Press,U.S. Incidental Racialization
Book SynopsisDespite the growing number ofAsian American and Latino/a law students, many panethnic students still feel as if they do not belong in this elite microcosm, which reflects the racial inequalities in mainstream American society. While in law school, these studentsoften from immigrant families, and often the first to go to collegehave to fight against racialized and gendered stereotypes. In Incidental Racialization, Diana Pan rigorously explores how systemic inequalities are produced and sustained in law schools.Through interviews with more than 100 law students and participant observations at two law schools, Pan examines how racialization happens alongside professional socialization. She investigates how panethnic students negotiate their identities, race, and gender in an institutional context. She also considers how their lived experiences factor into their student organization association choices and career paths.Incidental Racialization sheds light on how race operates in a law scho
£64.60
Temple University Press,U.S. Incidental Racialization
Book SynopsisDespite the growing number ofAsian American and Latino/a law students, many panethnic students still feel as if they do not belong in this elite microcosm, which reflects the racial inequalities in mainstream American society. While in law school, these studentsoften from immigrant families, and often the first to go to collegehave to fight against racialized and gendered stereotypes. In Incidental Racialization, Diana Pan rigorously explores how systemic inequalities are produced and sustained in law schools.Through interviews with more than 100 law students and participant observations at two law schools, Pan examines how racialization happens alongside professional socialization. She investigates how panethnic students negotiate their identities, race, and gender in an institutional context. She also considers how their lived experiences factor into their student organization association choices and career paths.Incidental Racialization sheds light on how race operates in a law scho
£21.59
Temple University Press,U.S. Resurrecting Slavery
Book SynopsisHow can politicians and ordinary citizens face the racial past in a country that frames itself as colorblind? In her timely and provocative book, Resurrecting Slavery, Crystal Fleming shows how people make sense of slavery in a nation where talking about race, colonialism, and slavery remains taboo. Noting how struggles over the meaning of racial history are informed by contemporary politics of race, she asks: What kinds of group identities are at stake today for activists and French people with ties to overseas territories where slavery took place?Fleming investigates the connections and disconnections that are made between racism, slavery, and colonialism in France. She provides historical context and examines how politicians and commemorative activists interpret the racial past and present. Resurrecting Slavery also includes in-depth interviews with French Caribbean migrants outside the commemorative movement to address the everyday racial politics of remembrance. Bringing a critiTrade Review"The French believe racism is something that affects other societies. Fleming's Resurrecting Slavery has forever exploded this myth! Based on over a hundred in-depth interviews, archival work, and ethnographic observations, this book demonstrates convincingly that France is indeed shaped by white supremacy. A major contribution to our scholarly work on racial formations, Resurrecting Slavery is a book I intend to assign to my classes for years to come."—Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Professor of Sociology, Duke University, and author of Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in America"Combining fascinating qualitative data with incisive critical race theory, Fleming offers new insights into the contradiction between France's color-blind political narrative and its ongoing legacy of racial oppression. She demonstrates that, in the hands of French Caribbean and black French activists, attempts to commemorate slavery have the potential to break the silence surrounding racism in France. Resurrecting Slavery is an important reminder that only by confronting white supremacy in its past and present, national and global incarnations can we hope to dismantle it."—Dorothy Roberts, George A. Weiss University Professor of Law and Sociology and the Raymond Pace and Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Professor of Civil Rights, University of Pennsylvania, and author of Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty"Linguistic barriers have too often hindered communication and learning possibilities among different sections of the global black diaspora. In her essential and illuminating book, Resurrecting Slavery, Crystal Fleming brings to our Anglo attention the state of debate on racism and slavery in continental and overseas France-a country that has refused to even recognize ‘race' as a legitimate category. As she shows, only by confronting the historical and ongoing realities of white supremacy can we truly begin to commemorate and overcome the legacy of the colonial and slave past."—Charles W. Mills, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, CUNY Graduate Center, and author of The Racial Contract
£73.80
Temple University Press,U.S. Resurrecting Slavery
Book SynopsisHow can politicians and ordinary citizens face the racial past in a country that frames itself as colorblind? In her timely and provocative book, Resurrecting Slavery, Crystal Fleming shows how people make sense of slavery in a nation where talking about race, colonialism, and slavery remains taboo. Noting how struggles over the meaning of racial history are informed by contemporary politics of race, she asks: What kinds of group identities are at stake today for activists and French people with ties to overseas territories where slavery took place?Fleming investigates the connections and disconnections that are made between racism, slavery, and colonialism in France. She provides historical context and examines how politicians and commemorative activists interpret the racial past and present. Resurrecting Slavery also includes in-depth interviews with French Caribbean migrants outside the commemorative movement to address the everyday racial politics of remembrance. Bringing a critiTrade Review"The French believe racism is something that affects other societies. Fleming's Resurrecting Slavery has forever exploded this myth! Based on over a hundred in-depth interviews, archival work, and ethnographic observations, this book demonstrates convincingly that France is indeed shaped by white supremacy. A major contribution to our scholarly work on racial formations, Resurrecting Slavery is a book I intend to assign to my classes for years to come."—Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Professor of Sociology, Duke University, and author of Racism without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in America"Combining fascinating qualitative data with incisive critical race theory, Fleming offers new insights into the contradiction between France's color-blind political narrative and its ongoing legacy of racial oppression. She demonstrates that, in the hands of French Caribbean and black French activists, attempts to commemorate slavery have the potential to break the silence surrounding racism in France. Resurrecting Slavery is an important reminder that only by confronting white supremacy in its past and present, national and global incarnations can we hope to dismantle it."—Dorothy Roberts, George A. Weiss University Professor of Law and Sociology and the Raymond Pace and Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Professor of Civil Rights, University of Pennsylvania, and author of Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty"Linguistic barriers have too often hindered communication and learning possibilities among different sections of the global black diaspora. In her essential and illuminating book, Resurrecting Slavery, Crystal Fleming brings to our Anglo attention the state of debate on racism and slavery in continental and overseas France-a country that has refused to even recognize ‘race' as a legitimate category. As she shows, only by confronting the historical and ongoing realities of white supremacy can we truly begin to commemorate and overcome the legacy of the colonial and slave past."—Charles W. Mills, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, CUNY Graduate Center, and author of The Racial Contract
£25.19
Temple University Press,U.S. The Palestinian Idea
Book SynopsisIs there a link between the colonization of Palestinian lands and the enclosing of Palestinian minds? The Palestinian Idea argues that it is precisely through film and media that hope can occasionally emerge amidst hopelessness, emancipation amidst oppression, freedom amidst apartheid. Greg Burris employs the work of Edward W. Said, Jacques Rancière, and Cedric J. Robinson in order to locate Palestinian utopia in the heart of the Zionist present. He analyzes the films of prominent directors Annemarie Jacir (Salt of This Sea, When I Saw You) and Hany Abu-Assad (Paradise Now)to investigate the emergence and formation of Palestinian identity. Looking at Mais Darwazah's documentary My Love Awaits Me By the Sea, Burris considers the counterhistories that make up the Palestinian experiencestories and memories that have otherwise been obscured or denied. He also examines Palestinian (in)visibility in the global media landscape, and how issues of Black-Palestinian transnational solidarity ar
£77.40
Temple University Press,U.S. The Palestinian Idea
Book SynopsisIs there a link between the colonization of Palestinian lands and the enclosing of Palestinian minds? The Palestinian Idea argues that it is precisely through film and media that hope can occasionally emerge amidst hopelessness, emancipation amidst oppression, freedom amidst apartheid. Greg Burris employs the work of Edward W. Said, Jacques Rancière, and Cedric J. Robinson in order to locate Palestinian utopia in the heart of the Zionist present. He analyzes the films of prominent directors Annemarie Jacir (Salt of This Sea, When I Saw You) and Hany Abu-Assad (Paradise Now)to investigate the emergence and formation of Palestinian identity. Looking at Mais Darwazah's documentary My Love Awaits Me By the Sea, Burris considers the counterhistories that make up the Palestinian experiencestories and memories that have otherwise been obscured or denied. He also examines Palestinian (in)visibility in the global media landscape, and how issues of Black-Palestinian transnational solidarity ar
£25.19
Temple University Press,U.S. Daily Labors
Book SynopsisOn street corners throughout the country, men stand or sit together patiently while they wait for someone looking to hire un buen trabajador (a good worker). These day laborers are visible symbols of the changing nature of workand the demographics of workersin the United States.Carolyn Pinedo-Turnovsky spent nearly three years visiting with African American men and Latino immigrant men who looked for work as day laborers at a Brooklyn street intersection. Her fascinating ethnography, Daily Labors, considers these immigrants and citizens as active participants in their social and economic life. They not only work for wages but also labor daily to institute change, create knowledge, and contribute new meanings to shape their social world.Daily Labors reveals how ideologies about race, gender, nation, and legal status operate on the corner and the vulnerabilities, discrimination, and exploitation workers face in this labor market. Pinedo-Turnovsky shows how workers market themselves to coTrade Review"This ethnographic study of a community of day laborers who sought work at an intersection in Brooklyn, New York, deepens our understanding of not only how the labor market for this important, precarious form of employment functions but also how—despite the constraints produced by hierarchies created on the basis of race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, immigration, and legality—workers maintain a sense of dignity and agency. By so doing, Pinedo-Turnovsky’s study enhances our knowledge of how structural conditions affect individuals’ interactions."—Arne L. Kalleberg, Kenan Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of Precarious Lives: Job Insecurity and Well-Being in Rich Democracies“A formidable account of the lives of day laborers in early twenty-first-century New York City, Daily Labors makes an important contribution to the literature on migration and urban studies. Pinedo-Turnovsky’s book is a uniquely valuable resource for scholars and students of the ethnography of contemporary work and labor.”—Immanuel Ness, Professor of Political Science, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, and author of Southern Insurgency: The Coming of the Global Working Class
£68.40
Temple University Press,U.S. Daily Labors
Book SynopsisOn street corners throughout the country, men stand or sit together patiently while they wait for someone looking to hire un buen trabajador (a good worker). These day laborers are visible symbols of the changing nature of workand the demographics of workersin the United States.Carolyn Pinedo-Turnovsky spent nearly three years visiting with African American men and Latino immigrant men who looked for work as day laborers at a Brooklyn street intersection. Her fascinating ethnography, Daily Labors, considers these immigrants and citizens as active participants in their social and economic life. They not only work for wages but also labor daily to institute change, create knowledge, and contribute new meanings to shape their social world.Daily Labors reveals how ideologies about race, gender, nation, and legal status operate on the corner and the vulnerabilities, discrimination, and exploitation workers face in this labor market. Pinedo-Turnovsky shows how workers market themselves to coTrade Review"This ethnographic study of a community of day laborers who sought work at an intersection in Brooklyn, New York, deepens our understanding of not only how the labor market for this important, precarious form of employment functions but also how—despite the constraints produced by hierarchies created on the basis of race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, immigration, and legality—workers maintain a sense of dignity and agency. By so doing, Pinedo-Turnovsky’s study enhances our knowledge of how structural conditions affect individuals’ interactions."—Arne L. Kalleberg, Kenan Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of Precarious Lives: Job Insecurity and Well-Being in Rich Democracies“A formidable account of the lives of day laborers in early twenty-first-century New York City, Daily Labors makes an important contribution to the literature on migration and urban studies. Pinedo-Turnovsky’s book is a uniquely valuable resource for scholars and students of the ethnography of contemporary work and labor.”—Immanuel Ness, Professor of Political Science, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, and author of Southern Insurgency: The Coming of the Global Working Class
£22.79
Temple University Press,U.S. Japanese American Millennials
Book Synopsis Whereas most scholarship on Japanese Americans looks at historical case studies or the 1.5 generation assimilating, this pioneering anthology, Japanese American Millennials, captures theexperiences, perspectives, and aspirations of Asian Americans born between 1980 and 2000. The editors and contributors present multiple perspectives on who Japanese Americans are, how they think about notions of community and culture, and how they engage and negotiate multiple social identities. The essays by scholars both in the United States and Japan draw upon the Japanese American millennial experience to examine how they find self-expression in Youth Basketball Leagues or Christian youth camps as well as how they grapple with being mixed-race, bicultural, or queer. Featuring compelling interviews and observations, Japanese American Millennials dislodges the dominant generational framework toaddress absences in the current literature and suggests how we migh
£77.35
Temple University Press,U.S. Japanese American Millennials
Book Synopsis Whereas most scholarship on Japanese Americans looks at historical case studies or the 1.5 generation assimilating, this pioneering anthology, Japanese American Millennials, captures theexperiences, perspectives, and aspirations of Asian Americans born between 1980 and 2000. The editors and contributors present multiple perspectives on who Japanese Americans are, how they think about notions of community and culture, and how they engage and negotiate multiple social identities. The essays by scholars both in the United States and Japan draw upon the Japanese American millennial experience to examine how they find self-expression in Youth Basketball Leagues or Christian youth camps as well as how they grapple with being mixed-race, bicultural, or queer. Featuring compelling interviews and observations, Japanese American Millennials dislodges the dominant generational framework toaddress absences in the current literature and suggests how we migh
£27.90
Temple University Press,U.S. Anna May Wong
Book Synopsis Finalist for the 2020 Organization of American Historians Mary Nickliss Prize Pioneering Chinese American actress Anna May Wong made more than sixty films, headlined theater and vaudeville productions, and even starred in her own television show. Her work helped shape racial modernity as she embodied the dominant image of Chinese and, more generally, “Oriental” women between 1925 and 1940. In Anna May Wong, Shirley Jennifer Lim re-evaluates Wong’s life and work as a consummate artist by mining an historical archive of her efforts outside of Hollywood cinema. From her pan-European films and her self-made My China Film to her encounters with artists such as Josephine Baker, Carl Van Vechten, and Walter Benjamin, Lim scrutinizes Wong’s cultural production and self-fashioning. Byconsidering the salient moments of Wong’s career and cultural output, Lim’s analysis explores the deeper meanings, and positTrade Review “Lim’s innovative book expands the existing archive on Anna May Wong and provides a new analytic framework for materials discussed in other works. Her masterful exploration of modernity and women of color through the central presence of Wong, combined with her creative ways of imagining different experiences, is both engaging and moving. Broadening the analysis from a singular celebrity, Anna May Wong shows how women of color whose careers relied on their visibility and self-fashioning encountered and engaged modernity and its various articulations. Richly nuanced, this book is elegant and lucid, absorbing and provocative.”—Karen J. Leong, Associate Professor of Women and Gender Studies at Arizona State University and author of The China Mystique: Pearl S. Buck, Anna May Wong, Mayling Soong, and the Transformation of American Orientalism
£69.70
Temple University Press,U.S. Anna May Wong
Book Synopsis Finalist for the 2020 Organization of American Historians Mary Nickliss Prize Pioneering Chinese American actress Anna May Wong made more than sixty films, headlined theater and vaudeville productions, and even starred in her own television show. Her work helped shape racial modernity as she embodied the dominant image of Chinese and, more generally, “Oriental” women between 1925 and 1940. In Anna May Wong, Shirley Jennifer Lim re-evaluates Wong’s life and work as a consummate artist by mining an historical archive of her efforts outside of Hollywood cinema. From her pan-European films and her self-made My China Film to her encounters with artists such as Josephine Baker, Carl Van Vechten, and Walter Benjamin, Lim scrutinizes Wong’s cultural production and self-fashioning. Byconsidering the salient moments of Wong’s career and cultural output, Lim’s analysis explores the deeper meanings, and positTrade Review “Lim’s innovative book expands the existing archive on Anna May Wong and provides a new analytic framework for materials discussed in other works. Her masterful exploration of modernity and women of color through the central presence of Wong, combined with her creative ways of imagining different experiences, is both engaging and moving. Broadening the analysis from a singular celebrity, Anna May Wong shows how women of color whose careers relied on their visibility and self-fashioning encountered and engaged modernity and its various articulations. Richly nuanced, this book is elegant and lucid, absorbing and provocative.”—Karen J. Leong, Associate Professor of Women and Gender Studies at Arizona State University and author of The China Mystique: Pearl S. Buck, Anna May Wong, Mayling Soong, and the Transformation of American Orientalism
£21.59
Temple University Press,U.S. Reinventing the Austin City Council
Book SynopsisUntil recently, Austin, the progressive, politically liberal capital of Texas, elected its city council using a not-so-progressive system. Candidates competed citywide for seats, and voters could cast ballots for as many candidates as there were seats up for election. However, this approach disadvantages the representation of geographically-concentrated minority groups, thereby—among other things—preventing the benefits of growth from reaching all of the city’s communities.Reinventing the Austin City Council explores the puzzle that was Austin’s reluctance to alter its at-large system and establish a geographically-based, single-member district system. Ann Bowman chronicles the repeated attempts to change the system, the eventual decision to do so, and the consequences of that change. In the process, she explores the many twists and turns that occurred in Austin as it struggled to design a fair system of representation. Reinventing the AustinTrade Review“This is a deeply researched yet readable analysis of Austin’s shift in city council composition. Austinites will recognize the players and positions, but the interested reader will find much to ponder as well. The impact of Austin’s new governance structure is still evolving—and this book is essential for understanding it.”—Annise Parker, former Mayor of HoustonTable of ContentsPreface and Acknowledgments Introduction: The Best Place to Live in America? 1. How Austin Became the City It Is Today . . . and What the City Council Had to Do with It 2 .Austin and the Long Road to City Council Districts 3. The Impact of Council Electoral Change Conclusion: Looking below the Surface . . . and Forward Notes Bibliography Index
£41.40
Temple University Press,U.S. Reinventing the Austin City Council
Book SynopsisUntil recently, Austin, the progressive, politically liberal capital of Texas, elected its city council using a not-so-progressive system. Candidates competed citywide for seats, and voters could cast ballots for as many candidates as there were seats up for election. However, this approach disadvantages the representation of geographically-concentrated minority groups, thereby—among other things—preventing the benefits of growth from reaching all of the city’s communities.Reinventing the Austin City Council explores the puzzle that was Austin’s reluctance to alter its at-large system and establish a geographically-based, single-member district system. Ann Bowman chronicles the repeated attempts to change the system, the eventual decision to do so, and the consequences of that change. In the process, she explores the many twists and turns that occurred in Austin as it struggled to design a fair system of representation. Reinventing the AustinTrade Review“This is a deeply researched yet readable analysis of Austin’s shift in city council composition. Austinites will recognize the players and positions, but the interested reader will find much to ponder as well. The impact of Austin’s new governance structure is still evolving—and this book is essential for understanding it.”—Annise Parker, former Mayor of HoustonTable of ContentsPreface and Acknowledgments Introduction: The Best Place to Live in America? 1. How Austin Became the City It Is Today . . . and What the City Council Had to Do with It 2 .Austin and the Long Road to City Council Districts 3. The Impact of Council Electoral Change Conclusion: Looking below the Surface . . . and Forward Notes Bibliography Index
£15.19
Temple University Press,U.S. Modern Migrations Black Interrogations
Book SynopsisModern Migrations, Black Interrogations uses reflections on the Black experience to consider the “unasked question of blackness” in modern migration and movement. The editors and contributors use the lens of Black Studies to show how migration—compelled by force or suggestion, from the transatlantic African slave trade to the Great Migration and the current refugee crisis—has been structured to reinforce white supremacy. Focusing on antiblackness in immigration and examining restrictions on freedom of movement and on settling alike, chapters address how Black im/mobility operates and how it can be distinguished from that of the migrant and the colonial settler, as well as from the transgressive mobilities of Indigenous populations. Looking at blackness, borders and border practices, and displacement, Modern Migrations, Black Interrogations investigates racialized boundaries that determine immigration policy, citizenship, legality, and iTrade Review“In modernity, from the transatlantic slave trade to today, the ‘migration’ of Black people is incommensurable with that of others. As Modern Migrations, Black Interrogations argues and demonstrates, reckoning with antiblackness and Blackness fundamentally destabilizes conventional histories, categories, meanings, and politics. Wide-ranging yet penetrating, the book’s theoretical, empirical, and literary analyses pose a bracing challenge to all academics, policymakers, and activists concerned with mobility.”—Moon-Kie Jung, Coeditor of Antiblackness and author of Beneath the Surface of White Supremacy: Denaturalizing U.S. Racisms Past and Present“The editors and contributors to this volume give migration studies a much-needed shake-up. Theoretically rich and analytically tight, its wide-ranging chapters probe and expose the unacknowledged extent to which antiblackness shapes the way we think and talk about the movement of people. Rather than just implicating the usual suspects, Modern Migrations, Black Interrogations calls on well-meaning humanitarians—scholars, activists, and the like—to wipe the smudge of antiblackness from our lens. This is a bold and important book.”—Jamie Longazel, Associate Professor of Law and Society at John Jay College, affiliated faculty in the International Migration Studies program at the CUNY Graduate Center, and coeditor of Migration and Mortality: Social Death, Dispossession, and Survival in the Americas (Temple)
£73.10
Temple University Press,U.S. The Impact of College Diversity
Book SynopsisIn 2005, Elizabeth Aries chronicled what 58 Amherst College freshmanBlack and white, affluent and lower-incomelearned from racial and class diversity. Her study emphasized the value of campus diversity at elite colleges. Four years later, Aries interviewed the same students about their diversity experiences as they graduated. Now, eight years later,she re-interviews her participants to see how and to what extent race and class continue to play a role as they move into adulthood.The Impact of College Diversitydetails howexposure to diversity in collegehelped shape Black andwhite graduates process issues of economic and racial privilege and inequalityat age 30.She investigates how college diversity experiences also facilitate the attainment of upward social mobility in lower-income students and the role that mobility played in their relationships with family and friends in their home communities. Aries further examines how interactions with peers of another race and class influenced deveTrade Review"Aries builds on her decades-long commitment to the undergraduate experience to further understand college students’ experiences with race and class diversity within elite institutions. Using a unique, longitudinal research design that draws on students’ rich accounts of their lives at Amherst College and in the years after graduation, Aries argues that elite institutions can serve as engines of social mobility and indeed have the obligation to do so. The Impact of College Diversity is a testament to the role that diversity and inclusion can play in deepening our understanding of self and other, promoting social mobility, and even enhancing productivity and innovation within society as a whole."— Jenny Stuber, Professor of Sociology at the University of North Florida, and author of Inside the College Gates: How Class and Culture Matter in Higher Education“The Impact of College Diversity provides in-depth insights into how college students’ experiences with social class and racial diversity shape their perspectives and lives well after graduation. Interviews with dozens of graduates who hold divergent identities also illustrate how college experiences and long-term outcomes sometimes vary based on these young adults’ race, their socioeconomic upbringing, their current socioeconomic status, and the intersections among these. This book will prove useful for readers who care about diversity and equity in higher education.”—Nicholas A. Bowman, Mary Louise Petersen Chair in Higher Education at the University of Iowa
£77.40
Temple University Press,U.S. The Impact of College Diversity
Book SynopsisIn 2005, Elizabeth Aries chronicled what 58 Amherst College freshmanBlack and white, affluent and lower-incomelearned from racial and class diversity. Her study emphasized the value of campus diversity at elite colleges. Four years later, Aries interviewed the same students about their diversity experiences as they graduated. Now, eight years later,she re-interviews her participants to see how and to what extent race and class continue to play a role as they move into adulthood.The Impact of College Diversitydetails howexposure to diversity in collegehelped shape Black andwhite graduates process issues of economic and racial privilege and inequalityat age 30.She investigates how college diversity experiences also facilitate the attainment of upward social mobility in lower-income students and the role that mobility played in their relationships with family and friends in their home communities. Aries further examines how interactions with peers of another race and class influenced deveTrade Review"Aries builds on her decades-long commitment to the undergraduate experience to further understand college students’ experiences with race and class diversity within elite institutions. Using a unique, longitudinal research design that draws on students’ rich accounts of their lives at Amherst College and in the years after graduation, Aries argues that elite institutions can serve as engines of social mobility and indeed have the obligation to do so. The Impact of College Diversity is a testament to the role that diversity and inclusion can play in deepening our understanding of self and other, promoting social mobility, and even enhancing productivity and innovation within society as a whole."— Jenny Stuber, Professor of Sociology at the University of North Florida, and author of Inside the College Gates: How Class and Culture Matter in Higher Education“The Impact of College Diversity provides in-depth insights into how college students’ experiences with social class and racial diversity shape their perspectives and lives well after graduation. Interviews with dozens of graduates who hold divergent identities also illustrate how college experiences and long-term outcomes sometimes vary based on these young adults’ race, their socioeconomic upbringing, their current socioeconomic status, and the intersections among these. This book will prove useful for readers who care about diversity and equity in higher education.”—Nicholas A. Bowman, Mary Louise Petersen Chair in Higher Education at the University of Iowa"[T]imely in its presentation of research on the importance of affirmative action.... Aries’ book is a worthwhile read for anyone interested in understanding the educational trajectories of students who must navigate class and/or race in universities and beyond."—Educational Review
£25.19
University of Toronto Press The Politics of Race
Book SynopsisThe Politics of Race is an excellent resource for students and general readers seeking to learn about race policies and legislation. Arguing that 'states make race,' it provides a unique comparison of the development and construction of race in three white settler societies — Canada, the United States, and Australia.This timely new edition focuses on the politics of race after 9/11 and Barack Obama's election as president of the United States. Jill Vickers and Annette Isaac explore how state-sanctioned race discrimination has intensified in the wake of heightened security. It also explains the new race formation of Islamophobia in all three countries, and the shifts in how Hispanics and Asian Americans are being treated in the United States. As race and politics become increasingly intertwined in both academic and popular discourse, The Politics of Race aids readers in evaluating different approaches for promoting racial justice aTable of ContentsPreface to the second edition Introduction. The Politics of Race in Three Settler States. Chapter One. Foundational Race Regimes - Internal Colonialism and Slavery Chapter Two. Subsequent Race Regimes - Segregation and Whites-only Nationalism Chapter Three. Immigration Policies and Multiculturalism Chapter Four. Federalism and Electoral Systems Chapter Five. Bottom-Up Approaches to Change Chapter Six. Top-Down approaches to Change Chapter Seven. The Meaning of Words. Notes Appendix References Index
£31.50
University of Toronto Press A Planetary AvantGarde
Book SynopsisA Planetary Avant-Garde explores how experimental poetics and literature networks have aesthetically and politically responded to the legacy of Iberian colonialism across the world. The book examines avant-garde responses to Spanish and Portuguese imperialism across Europe, Latin America, West Africa, and Southeast Asia between 1909 and 1929. Ignacio Infante critically traces the hegemony and resistance to the colonial regimes of Spain and Portugal across particular avant-garde networks, expanding our understanding of Western colonial and imperial ideologies of the early twentieth century. The book extends geopolitical dimensions of the historical avant-garde into a wider transnational and planetary framework, including divergent experiences of modernity, forms of experimental poetics, and understandings of history. It sheds light on topics, such as the relation between Portuguese futurism and European colonialism in West Africa, the Latin American avant-garde’Table of ContentsIllustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: Planetary Engagement, the Historical Avant-Garde, and Iberian Colonialism, 1909–1929 1. The Geographies and Temporalities of Futurism: Almada Negreiros, Portuguese Modernismo, and European Colonialism in Africa 2. Placing Vicente Huidobro within the Historical Avant-Garde: Experimental Poetics and the Planetary Critique of European Historicism 3. Away from Montmartre: Blaise Cendrars, Tarsila do Amaral, and the Travel Notes of the Historical Avant-Garde 4. The Specter of Translation: Angela Manalang Gloria, José Garcia Villa, Claro Recto, and the Comparative Poetics of Modernism in the Philippines Coda: Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe, Lilly Reich, and the Barcelona World’s Fair of 1929: Experimental Form as Network and the Traditionalist Politics of Empire Notes Bibliography Index
£41.40
University of Toronto Press Contemporary Inequalities and Social Justice in
Book SynopsisContemporary Inequalities and Social Justice in Canada examines the changing contours of inequality and social justice in contemporary Canada. Approaching questions of social justice from the perspectives of race, youth, precarious workers, Indigenous peoples, and the LGBTQ community, the contributors emphasize different ways of thinking about and addressing contemporary social inequalities and insecurities.Trade Review"Contemporary Inequalities and Social Justice in Canada is a refreshing burst of expertise and erudition. There is little doubt that it will help students, scholars, and activists chart a new course toward dismantling ineffective structures of old, creating instead the kind of transformative ‘political imaginaries’ that are worthy of the best of our labors." -- Maggie Quirt, York University * British Journal of Canadian Studies *Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Part 1: Contemporary Perspectives on Social Justice 1. Janine Brodie, Inequalities and Social Justice in Crisis Times 2. David Robichaud, Social Justice and the Extinction of Homo Crusoeconomicus 3. Malinda Smith, Diversity in Theory and Practice: Dividends, Downsides, and Dead-Ends Part 2: Living Precariously: Social Justice for Whom? 4. Judy Fudge, Justice for Whom? Migrant Workers in Canada 5. Grace-Edward Galabuzi, Post-Racialism and the "Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion" Project 6. Hayden King, Treaty Making and Breaking in Settler Colonial Canada Part 3: Activism and Alternative Futures 7. Meenal Shrivastava, Perils of Petroculture in a Neoliberal Resource Economy 8. Alexa Degagné, On Anger and Its Uses for Activism 9. Judy Rebick, Social Movements on the Path to Economic and Social Equality Bibliography Index
£45.90
University of Toronto Press The Epic of Juan Latino
Book SynopsisIn The Epic of Juan Latino, Elizabeth R. Wright tells the story of Renaissance Europe’s first black poet and his epic poem on the naval battle of Lepanto, Austrias Carmen (The Song of John of Austria).Piecing together the surviving evidence, Wright traces Latino’s life in Granada, Iberia’s last Muslim metropolis, from his early clandestine education as a slave in a noble household to his distinguished career as a schoolmaster at the University of Granada. When intensifying racial discrimination and the chaos of the Morisco Revolt threatened Latino’s hard-won status, he set out to secure his position by publishing an epic poem in Latin verse, the Austrias Carmen, that would demonstrate his mastery of Europe’s international literary language and celebrate his own African heritage.Through Latino’s remarkable, hitherto untold story, Wright illuminates the racial and religious tensions of sixteenth-century SpainTrade Review"Wright has produced an admirable and highly recommended study." -- William D. Phillips, Jr., University of Minnesota * University of Toronto Quarterly, vol 87 3, Summer 2018 *Table of ContentsIntroduction: A Lost Portrait and a Forgotten Name Part I: From Slave to Freedman in Granada Chapter 1: Latin Lessons Amid the Remnants of Al-Andalus Chapter 2: Civil War, Shattered Convivencia Part II: The Epic of Lepanto Chapter 3: A Black Poet and a Habsburg Phoenix Chapter 4: Christians and Muslims on the Battle Lines Chapter 5: The Costs of Modern Warfare Conclusion: Song of the Black Swan Epilogue: Juan Latino in the Harlem Renaissance Appendix 1: Elegy for Philip II, Annotated Translation Appendix 2: Chronology
£45.90
University of Toronto Press The Politics of Race
Book SynopsisAs race and politics become increasingly intertwined in both academic and popular discourse, The Politics of Race aids readers in evaluating different approaches for promoting racial justice and transforming states.Table of ContentsPreface to the second edition Introduction. The Politics of Race in Three Settler States. Chapter One. Foundational Race Regimes - Internal Colonialism and Slavery Chapter Two. Subsequent Race Regimes - Segregation and Whites-only Nationalism Chapter Three. Immigration Policies and Multiculturalism Chapter Four. Federalism and Electoral Systems Chapter Five. Bottom-Up Approaches to Change Chapter Six. Top-Down approaches to Change Chapter Seven. The Meaning of Words. Notes Appendix References Index
£62.05
John Wiley and Sons Ltd African American Voices
Book SynopsisCompelling and enlightening, this collection of primary source documents allows twenty-first century students to direct dial key figures in African-American history. It includes concise and perceptive commentary along with engaging suggestions for discussion and project work.Table of ContentsList of Illustrations ix Series Editors' Preface x Acknowledgments xii Introduction 1 Chapter 1 Freedom, 1865–1881 8 1 Black Ministers Meet with Representatives of the Federal Government, January 1865 9 2 Frederick Douglass Argues for Black Suffrage, April 1865 12 3 Jourdon Anderson Writes to His Old Master, 1865 15 4 Harriet Simril Testifies Before a Congressional Committee, South Carolina, 1871 18 5 Resolutions of the National Civil Rights Convention, 1873 21 6 The Exodusters, 1878 22 7 Black Washerwomen Demand a Living Wage, 1866 and 1881 24 Chapter 2 Upbuilding, 1893–1910 28 1 Ida B. Wells Speaks Out Against Lynching in the South, 1893 30 2 Booker T. Washington Speaks on Race at Atlanta, 1895 34 3 The National Association of Colored Women, 1897 and 1898 38 4 The Negro National Anthem, 1900 and 1905 44 5 Photographs from the Paris Exposition, 1900 46 6 From W. E. B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk, 1903 47 7 Black Leaders Disagree with Booker T. Washington: The Niagara Movement, 1905 52 8 Jack Johnson, 1910 56 Chapter 3 Migration, 1904–1919 59 1 Voices from The Independent, 1904 and 1912 60 2 Letters of Negro Migrants, 1916–1917 68 3 The East St. Louis Riot, 1917 72 4 Why African Americans Left the South, 1919 77 Chapter 4 Determination, 1917–1925 85 1 W. E. B. Du Bois on African Americans and World War I, 1918 and 1919 87 2 Poet Claude McKay Sets a New Tone, 1919 90 3 Emmett J. Scott Reflects on “What the Negro Got Out of the War,” 1919 90 4 Program of the NAACP, 1919 94 5 Marcus Garvey Outlines the Rights of Black Peoples, 1920 99 6 Cyril V. Briggs Merges Race Consciousness with Class Consciousness, 1922 106 7 Langston Hughes on Being Black in America, 1925 109 8 Amy Jacques Garvey Calls on Women to Lead, 1925 110 Chapter 5 Resistance, 1927–1939 114 1 The Scottsboro Boys Write to the Workers of the World, 1932 115 2 Angelo Herndon Joins the Communist Party, 1934 117 3 Ella Baker and Marvel Cooke Report on “The Bronx Slave Market,” 1935 124 4 Richard Wright Observes a Black Response to Joe Louis’ Victory, 1935 126 5 The Southern Negro Youth Congress on Freedom, Equality, and Opportunity, 1937 129 6 The Coordinating Committee for Employment, New York, 1938 131 7 Marian Anderson at the Lincoln Memorial, 1939 133 Chapter 6 Resolve, 1941–1952 136 1 The March on Washington Movement, 1941 138 2 The “Double V” Campaign, 1942 142 3 A Black Army Chaplain Protests the Treatment of Black Soldiers, 1944 142 4 Pauli Murray on Student Protests in Washington, DC, 1944 147 5 The Civil Rights Congress Charges the US with Genocide, 1951 151 6 African Americans Petition the President and the American Delegation to the United Nations, 1952 158 Chapter 7 Discontent, 1953–1959 165 1 Thurgood Marshall Reargues Brown v. Board of Education, 1953 167 2 The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955 171 3 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Writes on Non-Violence, 1957 174 4 Robert F. Williams Advocates Armed Self-Defense, 1959 177 Chapter 8 Revolt, 1960–1963 184 1 Young Activists Form the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), 1960 186 2 Ella Baker Reports on the Founding of SNCC, 1960 187 3 Robert Moses Writes from Jail in Magnolia, Mississippi, 1961 188 4 The Freedom Rides, 1961 189 5 Diane Nash Recalls the Early Student Movement, 1960–1961 191 6 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Writes a Letter from Birmingham Jail, 1963 197 7 The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, 1963 206 Chapter 9 Power, 1964–1966 210 1 Malcolm X Reflects on the Approaches African Americans Must Use, 1964 211 2 Fannie Lou Hamer Testifies on Behalf of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, 1964 218 3 Bayard Rustin Considers the Future of the Movement, 1965 221 4 Stokely Carmichael Explains Black Power, 1966 227 Chapter 10 Revolution, 1966–1977 234 1 The Black Panther Party Articulates a Platform, 1966 235 2 Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Opposes the War in Vietnam, 1967 238 3 The Poor People’s Campaign, 1968 243 4 The Black Panther Party Convenes a Revolutionary People’s Constitutional Convention, 1970 245 5 Gil Scott-Heron Warns: “The Revolution Will Not Be Televised,” 1971 250 6 The Combahee River Collective Statement Explains Black Feminism, 1977 252 Chapter 11 Crosscurrents, 1982–2001 261 1 Activists Call for Americans to Break Ties with South Africa, 1980 262 2 Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States, 1987 266 3 Jesse Jackson Rouses the Democratic National Convention, Atlanta, GA, July 19, 1988 271 4 African American Women in Defense of Ourselves, 1991 278 5 Maxine Waters Explains the Causes of Urban Crises to Congress, 1992 280 6 The Million Man March, 1995 282 7 Angela Davis Describes the Prison Industrial Complex, 1995 284 8 The Hip-Hop Summit Action Network, 2001 289 Chapter 12 Paradox, 2005–Present 293 1 New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin Addresses His City on Martin Luther King Day, 2006 295 2 Barack Obama Believes in “A More Perfect Union,” 2008 297 3 Julian Bond Reflects on Race and History in America, 2011 307 Index 316
£36.05
Bristol University Press Lived Diversities
Book SynopsisFocusing on multi-ethnic interaction in an inner city area, this book addresses difficult issues that are often simplistically and negatively portrayed, challenging the stereotypical denigration of inner city life, and Muslim communities in particular.Trade Review“A fascinating and revealing account of the micro-interactions of life in a contemporary British community. It is a very timely discussion which should help to challenge simplistic stereotypes of multiculturalism `failing’, urban decline and interethnic conflict.” Dr Caroline Howarth, LSE"Successfully explores the concept of co-existence within a contemporary multi-ethnic urban specific space...multiple authors contest deficit discoursesregarding diversity in Britain." Sociological Imagination"Lived diversities is a suggestive, richly textured study of everyday urban multiculture. Its engagement with issues of conflict, conviviality and banal civility will reward and challenge researchers and practitioners working through the implications of diversity for contemporary conceptions of citizenship." Therese O’Toole, University of Bristol"Husband et al's fine-grained study provides a necessary and compelling response to the corrosive but durable stereotypes of Bradford that have been circulated over the last years." Dr Gavan Titley, National University of Ireland“An intelligent and lively contribution to the critique of `social cohesion’ discourse in the policy sector. It provides a vivid analysis of local Bradford street life, where cars, buildings and sounds play an integral social, cultural and political role.” Prof John Eade, University of RoehamptonTable of ContentsIntroduction; Bradford and Manningham: historical context and current dynamics; Walking Manningham: Theorizing the reading of Manningham’s physical terrain: Streetscapes, soundscapes and the semiotics of the physical environment; Migratory waves and negotiated identities: The polish population of Bradford; Manningham: Lived Diversity; The Car, The Streetscape and Inter-ethnic Dynamics; Conclusion: Recognising Diversity and Planning for Co-existence.
£75.99
Bristol University Press Lived Diversities
Book SynopsisFocusing on multi-ethnic interaction in an inner city area, this book addresses difficult issues that are often simplistically and negatively portrayed, challenging the stereotypical denigration of inner city life, and Muslim communities in particular.Trade Review“A fascinating and revealing account of the micro-interactions of life in a contemporary British community. It is a very timely discussion which should help to challenge simplistic stereotypes of multiculturalism `failing’, urban decline and interethnic conflict.” Dr Caroline Howarth, LSE"Successfully explores the concept of co-existence within a contemporary multi-ethnic urban specific space...multiple authors contest deficit discoursesregarding diversity in Britain." Sociological Imagination"Lived diversities is a suggestive, richly textured study of everyday urban multiculture. Its engagement with issues of conflict, conviviality and banal civility will reward and challenge researchers and practitioners working through the implications of diversity for contemporary conceptions of citizenship." Therese O’Toole, University of Bristol"Husband et al's fine-grained study provides a necessary and compelling response to the corrosive but durable stereotypes of Bradford that have been circulated over the last years." Dr Gavan Titley, National University of Ireland“An intelligent and lively contribution to the critique of `social cohesion’ discourse in the policy sector. It provides a vivid analysis of local Bradford street life, where cars, buildings and sounds play an integral social, cultural and political role.” Prof John Eade, University of RoehamptonTable of ContentsIntroduction; Bradford and Manningham: historical context and current dynamics; Walking Manningham: Theorizing the reading of Manningham’s physical terrain: Streetscapes, soundscapes and the semiotics of the physical environment; Migratory waves and negotiated identities: The polish population of Bradford; Manningham: Lived Diversity; The Car, The Streetscape and Inter-ethnic Dynamics; Conclusion: Recognising Diversity and Planning for Co-existence.
£28.49
Bristol University Press Social Inclusion and Higher Education
Book SynopsisAvailable Open Access under CC-BY-NC licence. This book is about the experiences of students in institutions of higher education from 'non-traditional' backgrounds with contributions from the UK, the USA and Australia which reveal that the issues surrounding the inclusion of 'non-traditional' students are broadly similar in different countries.Trade Review"A timely, empirical and theoretical addition to the literature." Sociology"Social Inclusion and Higher Education is a well-balanced set of essays on a key contemporary topic and offers an impressively incisive and panoramic survey of the complex issues at stake." Ron Barnett, Emeritus Professor of Higher Education, Institute of Education, London"Inclusive mass education alone is not enough. But it is a start, and when status reproduction can be modified and the focus falls on student agency, education suddenly finds itself at the cutting edge of active democracy. This engaging collection by Tehmina Basit and Sally Tomlinson reworks familiar issues with fresh eyes. It explores the class, ethnic and gender dimensions of empowerment and maps their many intersections." Simon Marginson, University of Melbourne, AustraliaTable of ContentsForeword ~ David Watson; Introduction ~ Sally Tomlinson and Tehmina N. Basit; Part one: Issues in social inclusion: Capitals, ethnicity and higher education ~ Tariq Modood; Widening participation from an historical perspective: Increasing our understanding of higher education and social justice ~ David W. Thompson; Broadening participation among women and racial/ethnic minorities in STEM ~ Terrell L. Strayhorn, James M. DeVita and Amanda M. Blakewood; Social inclusion in a globalised higher education environment: The issue of equitable access to university in Australia ~ Richard James; From minority to majority: Educating diverse students in the United States ~ Yolanda T. Moses; Equity, diversity and feminist educational research: Enhancing the emerging field of pedagogical studies in higher education for inclusion ~ Miriam E David; Social justice as a matter of policy: Higher education for the masses ~ Trevor Gale and Deborah Tranter; Part two: Perspectives on widening participation: 'I've never known someone like me go to university': Class, ethnicity and access to higher education ~ Tehmina N Basit; Widening participation in the higher education quasi-market: Diversity, learning, and literacy ~ Rob Smith; Para Crecer: Successful higher education strategies used by Latina students ~ Pamela Hernandez and Diane M. Dunlap; Empowering non-traditional students in the UK: Feedback and the hidden curriculum ~ Andy Cramp; Teaching indigenous teachers: Valuing diverse perspectives ~ Ninetta Santoro, Jo-Anne Reid, Laurie Crawford and Lee Simpson; Widening access to higher education through partnership working ~ Jaswinder K Dhillon; Higher education, human rights and inclusive citizenship ~ Audrey H. Osler;
£30.39
Policy Press Racism Policy and Politics
Book SynopsisThis book analyses and bridges the gap between critical social research on race and politics by reviewing the academic field of race theorising and scholarship, covering changes in race and racism debates in recent decades, and assessing the extent, scope, and limits of academic engagements with, and impact on, policy and politics.Trade Review"A stunning, authoritative and urgently needed book that unpicks with forensic precision the relationship between racism and injustice and the world of social policy and politics. A book of deep critical understanding but also one that alerts us to the politics of sociology itself and why it can be valuable." Les Back, Goldsmiths, University of London'The author, well known for his acute insights into racism and policy-making in policing, provides a unique, original and incisive account of the complex ways in which policy formulations in the field of racism are subject to pressures from public bodies. Essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the changing fortunes of 'institutional racism' after its controversial use in the Macpherson report. An invaluable contribution.' Ali Rattansi, City, University of London"A sharp and original contribution to the analysis of contemporary debates about racism, policing and public policy. It allows readers to explore the complex forms of racism in our contemporary environment." John Solomos, University of Warwick"The author, as both policy insider and sharp sociological analyst, conveys a multitude of critical and reflective insights into racialised processes in public policy making." Norman Ginsburg, London Metropolitan University"Addressing key questions about policing, race and institutional racism, this unique book offers a fascinating insight into the relationship between race scholarship, public engagement and policy." Vicki Harman, University of SurreyTable of ContentsIntroduction: The `changing same’; Racial reality and unreality; Racialisation; Race critical scholarship and public engagement; Sociology and Institutional Racism; The impacts of social science; The end(s) of institutional racism; Racialised numerics; Framing riots.
£75.99
Policy Press Racism Policy and Politics
Book SynopsisThis book analyses and bridges the gap between critical social research on race and politics by reviewing the academic field of race theorising and scholarship, covering changes in race and racism debates in recent decades, and assessing the extent, scope, and limits of academic engagements with, and impact on, policy and politics.Trade Review"A stunning, authoritative and urgently needed book that unpicks with forensic precision the relationship between racism and injustice and the world of social policy and politics. A book of deep critical understanding but also one that alerts us to the politics of sociology itself and why it can be valuable." Les Back, Goldsmiths, University of London'The author, well known for his acute insights into racism and policy-making in policing, provides a unique, original and incisive account of the complex ways in which policy formulations in the field of racism are subject to pressures from public bodies. Essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the changing fortunes of 'institutional racism' after its controversial use in the Macpherson report. An invaluable contribution.' Ali Rattansi, City, University of London"A sharp and original contribution to the analysis of contemporary debates about racism, policing and public policy. It allows readers to explore the complex forms of racism in our contemporary environment." John Solomos, University of Warwick"The author, as both policy insider and sharp sociological analyst, conveys a multitude of critical and reflective insights into racialised processes in public policy making." Norman Ginsburg, London Metropolitan University"Addressing key questions about policing, race and institutional racism, this unique book offers a fascinating insight into the relationship between race scholarship, public engagement and policy." Vicki Harman, University of SurreyTable of ContentsIntroduction: The `changing same’; Racial reality and unreality; Racialisation; Race critical scholarship and public engagement; Sociology and Institutional Racism; The impacts of social science; The end(s) of institutional racism; Racialised numerics; Framing riots.
£24.69
Bristol University Press Social Work in a Diverse Society
Book SynopsisTaking a transformative approach, this exciting new textbook bridges the gap between the theory and practice of social work with Black and minority ethnic groups. Practice scenarios and case studies encourage students and practitioners to form innovative solutions to service delivery.Trade Review"A really interesting collection that looks in some depth at social work with BME individuals and communities. It is very diverse, allowing for some excellent practice-based contributions on quite specialist topics."Jonathan Scourfield, Cardiff University"An accessible, informed and critical exploration of social work with Black and minority ethnic groups. It is a valuable addition to the literature in promoting innovative approaches to good practice." Laura Penketh, Liverpool Hope University"If you only buy one book this year, make it this one. Its wide-ranging reach offers a new paradigm for social work - one that places diversity at its heart, in a new vision of embedded transformatory practice." Professor Viviene Cree, University of Edinburgh"This edited text offers a breadth of knowledge and literature on this subject, informed by chapters skilfully constructed by experts in the field." Jim Campbell, University College Dublin"Exploring the complexity of anti-racist, and race equality practice, this book is essential reading for all those interested in transformatory practice with black and minority ethnic groups." Alastair Christie, University College CorkTable of ContentsPart I: Theory and practice; Building Transformative Practice: What does the theory say? ~ Charlotte Williams and Mekada Graham; ‘Pushing theory’: Critical cultural competence in social work practice: case example from Northern Ireland ~ Chaitali Das and Julia Ahmed; Part II: Practice themes; Risk and Safety: The Strengths-based Approach in Child Protection with Black and Minority Ethnic Families ~ Claudia Bernard & Dawn Haughton; Personalisation and older people from minority ethnic groups ~ Nicola Moran; Narrative and Story-telling in Assessment : An example of work with Muslim youth ~ Lena Robinson and Rafik Gardee; Interpreting: One size fits all? English language an essential component of social work? ~ Sian Lucas; Multi-Disciplinary working: Working with cultural diversity: lessons from mental health practice ~ Frank Keating & Stefan Brown; Co-Production: Working alongside refugees and asylum seekers: ‘Popular’ social work in action in Britain ~ Michael Lavalette and Rhetta Moran; Consultation and civic participation ~ Charlotte Williams and Tue Hong Barker; Outreach: Care experiences amongst Gypsy/Traveller families ~ Dan Allen and Sarah Cemlyn; Intellectual Disability, Ethnicity and Cultural Diversity ~ Raghu Raghavan; Self care and Social Work ~ Charlotte Williams and Mekada Graham; Evaluation: serious case reviews and anti-racist practice ~ Kish Bhatti Sinclair; Conclusion: Emergent theory for practice ~ Charlotte Williams and Mekada Graham.
£75.99
Bristol University Press Social Work in a Diverse Society
Book SynopsisTaking a transformative approach, this exciting new textbook bridges the gap between the theory and practice of social work with Black and minority ethnic groups. Practice scenarios and case studies encourage students and practitioners to form innovative solutions to service delivery.Trade Review"A really interesting collection that looks in some depth at social work with BME individuals and communities. It is very diverse, allowing for some excellent practice-based contributions on quite specialist topics."Jonathan Scourfield, Cardiff University"An accessible, informed and critical exploration of social work with Black and minority ethnic groups. It is a valuable addition to the literature in promoting innovative approaches to good practice." Laura Penketh, Liverpool Hope University"If you only buy one book this year, make it this one. Its wide-ranging reach offers a new paradigm for social work - one that places diversity at its heart, in a new vision of embedded transformatory practice." Professor Viviene Cree, University of Edinburgh"This edited text offers a breadth of knowledge and literature on this subject, informed by chapters skilfully constructed by experts in the field." Jim Campbell, University College Dublin"Exploring the complexity of anti-racist, and race equality practice, this book is essential reading for all those interested in transformatory practice with black and minority ethnic groups." Alastair Christie, University College CorkTable of ContentsPart I: Theory and practice; Building Transformative Practice: What does the theory say? ~ Charlotte Williams and Mekada Graham; ‘Pushing theory’: Critical cultural competence in social work practice: case example from Northern Ireland ~ Chaitali Das and Julia Ahmed; Part II: Practice themes; Risk and Safety: The Strengths-based Approach in Child Protection with Black and Minority Ethnic Families ~ Claudia Bernard & Dawn Haughton; Personalisation and older people from minority ethnic groups ~ Nicola Moran; Narrative and Story-telling in Assessment : An example of work with Muslim youth ~ Lena Robinson and Rafik Gardee; Interpreting: One size fits all? English language an essential component of social work? ~ Sian Lucas; Multi-Disciplinary working: Working with cultural diversity: lessons from mental health practice ~ Frank Keating & Stefan Brown; Co-Production: Working alongside refugees and asylum seekers: ‘Popular’ social work in action in Britain ~ Michael Lavalette and Rhetta Moran; Consultation and civic participation ~ Charlotte Williams and Tue Hong Barker; Outreach: Care experiences amongst Gypsy/Traveller families ~ Dan Allen and Sarah Cemlyn; Intellectual Disability, Ethnicity and Cultural Diversity ~ Raghu Raghavan; Self care and Social Work ~ Charlotte Williams and Mekada Graham; Evaluation: serious case reviews and anti-racist practice ~ Kish Bhatti Sinclair; Conclusion: Emergent theory for practice ~ Charlotte Williams and Mekada Graham.
£23.74
Policy Press Minority women and austerity
Book SynopsisBassel and Emejulu explore minority women's experiences of austerity measures in France and Britain. They demonstrate how they use their race, class, gender and legal status for collective action in the face of the neoliberal colonisation.Trade Review"This book's focus on minority women's agency and resistance makes a valuable contribution to research on crisis and austerity." Majella Kilkey, University of Sheffield "For detailed, original analyses of minority women's activism and claims-making in this Europe of austerity politics, read this excellent book." Khursheed Wadia, University of Warwick, UK "Brings a theoretically sophisticated intersectional approach to interviews with minority ethnic women activists and policy officers and illuminates the multi-faceted ways in which the women experience and resist often patronising initiatives. The insights are compelling and repay close reading. It is hoped that future initiatives will start from the insights it provides." Ann Phoenix, University College LondonTable of ContentsForeword by Patricia Hill Collins Taking minority women's activism seriously Theorising and resisting 'political racelessness' in Europe Whose crisis counts? Enterprising activism The politics of survival Learning across cases, learning beyond 'cases' Conclusion: warning signs
£25.64
Bristol University Press Community Organising against Racism
Book SynopsisGary Craig and his contributors blend theory and practice-based case studies to review how different community development approaches can empower minority ethnic communities to confront racism and overcome social, economic and political disadvantage.Trade Review"Community organising against racism fills a major gap in the literature on community development – an essential sourcebook for academics, students, practitioners and policy makers alike." Marjorie Mayo, Emeritus Professor of Community Development, Goldsmiths, University of LondonTable of ContentsPart I: theories and concepts; Introduction: conceptualisation and historical framework: ethnicity and migration ~ Gary Craig; Community development and political participation by minorities ~ Asifa Afridi; Do minority groups need development? An Illichian approach ~ Brian Belton; Race based hate crime and Islamaphobia ~ Dr. Rick Bowler; Part II: Case studies; Capacity building with minority ethnic groups ~ Phil Ware; Learning Alliance approaches to working with minority communities on health care innovation ~ David Smith; Community development with Chinese mental health service users ~ Lynn Tang; Youth participation amongst ethnic minorities ~ Louisa Cocris; The role of mediators in activating communities ~ Colin Clark; Cultural identity and community development with Roma communities: an asset-based approach ~ Stuart Hashagen; Gender discrimination and community development with Gypsy, Roma and Travellers ~ Holly Notcutt; Addressing the effects of racism through community development ~ Tina Lathouras; An arts-based approach to intercultural work ~ Ranjit Sondhi; Working with multiple minority groups in Toronto ~ Morris Beckford; Community development, biculturalism and multiculturalism ~ Angela Summersgill; Working in a multicultural context in the US ~ Lorraine Gutierrez; Building strengths in asylum seeker communities ~ Linda Briskman and Lis de Vries; Participatory action research with migrant and asylum seeking women ~ Margaret Greenfields and Natalia Paszkiewicz; Re-negotiating identity between migrant workers ~ Rob Gregory; Working with female migrant workers in Hong Kong ~ SL Hung and KK Fung; Conclusion ~ Gary Craig.
£81.89
Policy Press The Other America
Book SynopsisChallenging populist views about the white working class in the US, this book showcases what they really think about the defining issues in today's America. As the 2020 presidential elections draw near, this is an invaluable insight into the complex views on 2016 election candidates, race, identity and cross-racial connections.Trade Review"This timely book offers a window into the fears and sense of dislocation of white, working class Americans, while still offering hope for creating new cross-racial coalitions." * Susan J. Popkin, Urban Institute *Table of ContentsIntroduction; the state of the white working class; Under pressure; a community lost, and regained?; Problematic framing; setting the record straight; Political disconnect, nostalgia; reclaiming the past; Grassroots definitions of whiteness, working class; Reflections on race, identity and change; Conclusion; a new understanding of the white working class.
£75.99
Policy Press The Other America
Book SynopsisChallenging populist views about the white working class in the US, this book showcases what they really think about the defining issues in today's America. As the 2020 presidential elections draw near, this is an invaluable insight into the complex views on 2016 election candidates, race, identity and cross-racial connections.Trade Review"This timely book offers a window into the fears and sense of dislocation of white, working class Americans, while still offering hope for creating new cross-racial coalitions." * Susan J. Popkin, Urban Institute *Table of ContentsIntroduction; the state of the white working class; Under pressure; a community lost, and regained?; Problematic framing; setting the record straight; Political disconnect, nostalgia; reclaiming the past; Grassroots definitions of whiteness, working class; Reflections on race, identity and change; Conclusion; a new understanding of the white working class.
£18.99
Bristol University Press Permanent Racism
Book SynopsisThis book examines and challenges the marginalisation of critical race analysis in debates on social justice, which have been constrained by a facile post-racialism. Highlighting the need to decolonise public debate and antiracism itself, it provides an essential resource for academics, students and activists.Table of Contents1. Introduction: 'No Place in Our Society' 2. Race: Real and Unreal 3. Permanent Racism: Derrick Bell’s Racial Realism 4. Postracial Britain 5. Against Antiracism 6. Whatever Happened to the Black Working Class? 7. Conclusion: Black Futures
£77.39
MP-NCA Uni of North Carolina Power to the Poor BlackBrown Coalition and the Fight for Economic Justice 19601974
£30.56