Winning the race
beyond the crisis in Black America
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Author
Publication
2005 - Gotham Books, New York, New York (State)
Language
English
Word Count
108,500 words, Guess
Page Count
434 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL24961939M
- ISBN-139781592401888
- ISBN-101592401880
- OCLC Control Number61361548
- Library of Congress Control Number2005023472
Classifications
- DDC305.896/073
- LCCE185.86 .M427 2006
Description
Four decades after the great victories of the Civil Rights Movement secured equal rights for African-Americans, black America is in crisis. Indeed, by most measurable standards, conditions for many blacks have grown worse since 1965: desperate poverty, incarceration rates, teenage pregnancy and out-of- wedlock births, and educational failures. For years, pundits have blamed these problems on forces outside the black community. But now, in a broad-ranging re-envisioning of the post-Civil Rights black American experience, author McWhorter argues that black America's current problems began with an unintended byproduct of the Civil Rights revolution, a crippling mindset of "therapeutic alienation." This wary stance toward mainstream American culture, although it is a legacy of racism in the past, continues to hold blacks back, and McWhorter traces the poisonous effects of this defeatist attitude. McWhorter puts forth a new vision of black leadership, arguing that both blacks and whites must abolish the culture of victimhood.--From publisher description.
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