Description

Book Synopsis
George Yancy gathers white scholarship that dwells on the experience of whiteness as a problem without sidestepping the questionâs implications for Black people or people of color. This unprecedented reversion of the âœBlack problemâ narrative challenges contemporary rhetoric of a color-evasive world in a critically engaging and persuasive study.

Trade Review
Yancy is a prolific author and editor whose previous collections include What White Looks Like. Here he once again gives readers an edited volume on philosophy of race that is distinctive and insightful. This new book addresses a question to white academics who are antiracist scholars: 'how does it feel to be a white problem?' This volume is unique in not only accounting for whiteness generically, but also treating whiteness as a problem—something to be named and diagnosed as a fundamental stumbling block for racial justice. Among the book's virtues are the insights offered by having 14 individuals speak of their personal and embodied experiences as white people in a racialized world. While the contributors avoid homogenizing the experience of white people, they all pinpoint a set of ways in which whiteness is a problem both within and outside antiracist activism. Any library that wants to expand its collection of texts dealing with race and racism should acquire this book. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-level undergraduates through researchers/faculty. * CHOICE *
[T]he reader owes gratitude to the editor's oversight of the project…. Yancy's edited volume offers a model of solidarity among subjects who oscillate in that anguished space between suturing and unsuturing, which, to my mind, promises an effective solidarity…. This work is neither for the weak of heart, nor does it belong to the (whitely) project of being a hero. Simply put, it is your only option, white ally, ‘because your liberation is bound up with mine.’ * Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy *
George Yancy’s essay collection enables an unprecedented insight into the white academic’s mind struggling to come to terms with its own privilege and complicity in structural discrimination. The contributors’ honest reflections are a forceful reminder of the ongoing challenge and difficulty of acknowledging the processual nature of dismantling white privilege. However, the major contribution of this volume is to be found in Yancy’s introduction, which provides the theoretical framework for the pressing task of staying ‘un-sutured’ vis-à-vis the comfortable and widespread attitude of having arrived at an anti-racist attitude. This unfinished process is indispensable for any white person eager to challenge the condition of silently participating and thereby perpetuating racial structures of power and oppression. The thought-provoking essay collection is highly recommended for anyone interested in better understanding – and challenging – the disconcerting state of racial affairs in the US. * Kult Online *
Many books have grappled with Du Bois’s “souls of black folk,” but this is the first to wrestle deeply with his forgotten concern for the immoral “souls of white folk”—the greatest racial problem facing this country. Philosopher George Yancy has compiled yet another major book that teaches well about the deepest racial realities shaping this much-troubled nation. -- Joe R. Feagin, Texas A&M University
White Self-Criticality beyond Anti-racism: How Does it Feel to Be a White Problem? is a timely, much needed intervention into the stale race-talk of US ‘post-racial’ discourse. The essays from white scholars in philosophy and other fields sweeps the reader into a profound, yet accessible, set of reflections and arguments about how to understand whiteness—and non-blackness—as the core foundation of the US’s ‘race problem.’ Yancy’s mesmerizing introduction un-sutures non-black readers while compelling them to keep reading, to work harder to understand not only how it should feel to be a White Problem, but how to arrive at more constructive solutions to resolving deep-seated, everyday, existential racism. -- Falguni A. Sheth, Hampshire College
I know many whites who do not make space for the question: ‘How does it feel to be a white problem?’ It is this question, this inversion of which race is a ‘problem’ in societies organized around racial hierarchy, that George Yancy forces his readers to address. The fourteen white anti-racist scholars that make up this evocative, compelling book shed needed light on how whiteness as a position of privilege is deployed even in the context of anti-racist interventions. This is an essential text for those who wish to understand how whiteness remains hegemonic across time and place. -- Charles A. Gallagher, La Salle University
George Yancy's governing metaphor of suturing is accurate: white personalities, institutions, and knowledge systems have been sewn up to contain or exclude racial truths that are now putrefying without exposure to air. Reading this collection of essays is like being in a dynamic, self-reflective encounter group of people determined to forego the comforts of ignorance, innocence, and illusions of goodness, and instead to open the festering wounds that were bandaged over. The authors of these searching essays have agreed to answer Yancy's question of what it feels like to be the white racial problem and I appreciate their complex openness to the question. -- Peggy McIntosh, associate director, Wellesley Centers for Women

Table of Contents
Introduction: Un-sutured, George Yancy Chapter 1: Flipping the Script…and Still a Problem: Staying in the Anxiety of Being a Problem, Barbara Applebaum Chapter 2: Feeling White, Feeling Good: “Antiracist” White Sensibilities, Karen Teel Chapter 3: ‘White Talk’ As a Barrier to Understanding the Problem with Whiteness, Alison Bailey Chapter 4: Un-forgetting as a Collective Tactic, Alexis Shotwell Chapter 5: “Don’t make a labor of it”: Relationality and the Problem of Whiteness, Crista Lebens Chapter 6: “You’re the nigger, baby, it isn’t me”: The willed Ignorance and Wishful Innocence of White America, Robert Jensen Chapter 7: Humility and Whiteness: “How did I look without seeing, hear without listening?”, Rebecca Aanerud Chapter 8: I Speak for My People: A Racial Manifesto, Crispin Sartwell Chapter 9: Being a White Problem and Feeling It, Bridget M. Newell Chapter 10: Keeping the Strange Unfamiliar: The Racial Privilege of Dismantling Whiteness, Nancy McHugh Chapter 11: Cornered by Whiteness: On Being a White Problem, David S. Owen Chapter 12: Whiteness, Democracy, and the Hegemonic Mind, Steve Martinot Chapter 13: Am I the Small Axe or the Big Tree?, Steve Garner Chapter 14: Contort Yourself: Music, Whiteness, and the Politics of Disorientation, Robin James

White SelfCriticality beyond Antiracism

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    A Paperback by Rebecca Aanerud, Barbara Applebaum

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      View other formats and editions of White SelfCriticality beyond Antiracism by

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 3/9/2016 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498506731, 978-1498506731
      ISBN10: 1498506739

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      George Yancy gathers white scholarship that dwells on the experience of whiteness as a problem without sidestepping the questionâs implications for Black people or people of color. This unprecedented reversion of the âœBlack problemâ narrative challenges contemporary rhetoric of a color-evasive world in a critically engaging and persuasive study.

      Trade Review
      Yancy is a prolific author and editor whose previous collections include What White Looks Like. Here he once again gives readers an edited volume on philosophy of race that is distinctive and insightful. This new book addresses a question to white academics who are antiracist scholars: 'how does it feel to be a white problem?' This volume is unique in not only accounting for whiteness generically, but also treating whiteness as a problem—something to be named and diagnosed as a fundamental stumbling block for racial justice. Among the book's virtues are the insights offered by having 14 individuals speak of their personal and embodied experiences as white people in a racialized world. While the contributors avoid homogenizing the experience of white people, they all pinpoint a set of ways in which whiteness is a problem both within and outside antiracist activism. Any library that wants to expand its collection of texts dealing with race and racism should acquire this book. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-level undergraduates through researchers/faculty. * CHOICE *
      [T]he reader owes gratitude to the editor's oversight of the project…. Yancy's edited volume offers a model of solidarity among subjects who oscillate in that anguished space between suturing and unsuturing, which, to my mind, promises an effective solidarity…. This work is neither for the weak of heart, nor does it belong to the (whitely) project of being a hero. Simply put, it is your only option, white ally, ‘because your liberation is bound up with mine.’ * Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy *
      George Yancy’s essay collection enables an unprecedented insight into the white academic’s mind struggling to come to terms with its own privilege and complicity in structural discrimination. The contributors’ honest reflections are a forceful reminder of the ongoing challenge and difficulty of acknowledging the processual nature of dismantling white privilege. However, the major contribution of this volume is to be found in Yancy’s introduction, which provides the theoretical framework for the pressing task of staying ‘un-sutured’ vis-à-vis the comfortable and widespread attitude of having arrived at an anti-racist attitude. This unfinished process is indispensable for any white person eager to challenge the condition of silently participating and thereby perpetuating racial structures of power and oppression. The thought-provoking essay collection is highly recommended for anyone interested in better understanding – and challenging – the disconcerting state of racial affairs in the US. * Kult Online *
      Many books have grappled with Du Bois’s “souls of black folk,” but this is the first to wrestle deeply with his forgotten concern for the immoral “souls of white folk”—the greatest racial problem facing this country. Philosopher George Yancy has compiled yet another major book that teaches well about the deepest racial realities shaping this much-troubled nation. -- Joe R. Feagin, Texas A&M University
      White Self-Criticality beyond Anti-racism: How Does it Feel to Be a White Problem? is a timely, much needed intervention into the stale race-talk of US ‘post-racial’ discourse. The essays from white scholars in philosophy and other fields sweeps the reader into a profound, yet accessible, set of reflections and arguments about how to understand whiteness—and non-blackness—as the core foundation of the US’s ‘race problem.’ Yancy’s mesmerizing introduction un-sutures non-black readers while compelling them to keep reading, to work harder to understand not only how it should feel to be a White Problem, but how to arrive at more constructive solutions to resolving deep-seated, everyday, existential racism. -- Falguni A. Sheth, Hampshire College
      I know many whites who do not make space for the question: ‘How does it feel to be a white problem?’ It is this question, this inversion of which race is a ‘problem’ in societies organized around racial hierarchy, that George Yancy forces his readers to address. The fourteen white anti-racist scholars that make up this evocative, compelling book shed needed light on how whiteness as a position of privilege is deployed even in the context of anti-racist interventions. This is an essential text for those who wish to understand how whiteness remains hegemonic across time and place. -- Charles A. Gallagher, La Salle University
      George Yancy's governing metaphor of suturing is accurate: white personalities, institutions, and knowledge systems have been sewn up to contain or exclude racial truths that are now putrefying without exposure to air. Reading this collection of essays is like being in a dynamic, self-reflective encounter group of people determined to forego the comforts of ignorance, innocence, and illusions of goodness, and instead to open the festering wounds that were bandaged over. The authors of these searching essays have agreed to answer Yancy's question of what it feels like to be the white racial problem and I appreciate their complex openness to the question. -- Peggy McIntosh, associate director, Wellesley Centers for Women

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Un-sutured, George Yancy Chapter 1: Flipping the Script…and Still a Problem: Staying in the Anxiety of Being a Problem, Barbara Applebaum Chapter 2: Feeling White, Feeling Good: “Antiracist” White Sensibilities, Karen Teel Chapter 3: ‘White Talk’ As a Barrier to Understanding the Problem with Whiteness, Alison Bailey Chapter 4: Un-forgetting as a Collective Tactic, Alexis Shotwell Chapter 5: “Don’t make a labor of it”: Relationality and the Problem of Whiteness, Crista Lebens Chapter 6: “You’re the nigger, baby, it isn’t me”: The willed Ignorance and Wishful Innocence of White America, Robert Jensen Chapter 7: Humility and Whiteness: “How did I look without seeing, hear without listening?”, Rebecca Aanerud Chapter 8: I Speak for My People: A Racial Manifesto, Crispin Sartwell Chapter 9: Being a White Problem and Feeling It, Bridget M. Newell Chapter 10: Keeping the Strange Unfamiliar: The Racial Privilege of Dismantling Whiteness, Nancy McHugh Chapter 11: Cornered by Whiteness: On Being a White Problem, David S. Owen Chapter 12: Whiteness, Democracy, and the Hegemonic Mind, Steve Martinot Chapter 13: Am I the Small Axe or the Big Tree?, Steve Garner Chapter 14: Contort Yourself: Music, Whiteness, and the Politics of Disorientation, Robin James

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