The Arc of a Bad Idea: Understanding and Transcending RacePosted in Books, History, Media Archive, Monographs, Philosophy, Social Science, Teaching Resources on 2016-04-10 01:39Z by Steven |
The Arc of a Bad Idea: Understanding and Transcending Race
Oxford University Press
2016-02-18
192 Pages
7 Black and white
6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches
Hardcover ISBN: 9780199386260
- It is written by a person who is intimately familiar with living as an adversely racialized person
- It introduces readers to the non-racial worldview
- It provides first-person narratives of people commonalty ascribed to the black/African American racial category who eschew racial identification altogether.
- It furnishes the concept of racialization as the antidote to normalizing race as a naturally and unavoidable aspect of identity.
- It explains essentialism
- It reconciles the seeming conflict between race-conscious and color-blind ideologies
- It provides a way beyond the problems of race that plague this country
For the vast majority of human existence we did without the idea of race. Since its inception a mere few hundred years ago, and despite the voluminous documentation of the problems associated with living within the racial worldview, we have come to act as if race is something we cannot live without. The Arc of a Bad Idea: Understanding and Transcending Race presents a penetrating, provocative, and promising analysis of and alternative to the hegemonic racial worldview. How race came about, how it evolved into a natural-seeming aspect of human identity, and how racialization, as a habit of the mind, can be broken is presented through the unique and corrective framing of race as a time-bound (versus eternal) concept, the lifespan of which is traceable and the demise of which is predictable. The narratives of individuals who do not subscribe to racial identity despite be ascribed to the black/African American racial category are presented as clear and compelling illustrations of how a non-racial identity and worldview is possible and arguably preferable to the status quo. Our view of and approach to race (in theory, pedagogy, and policy) is so firmly ensconced in a sense of it as inescapable and indispensible that we are in effect shackled to the lethal absurdity we seek to escape. Theorist, teachers, policy-makers and anyone who seeks a transformative perspective on race and racial identity will be challenged, enriched, and empowered by this refreshing treatment of one of our most confounding and consequential dilemmas.
Table of Contents
- Epigraph
- Acknowledgments
- List of Illustrations
- Preface: Lethal Absurdity De Jour
- PART I: UNDERSTANDING RACE
- 1. Simile, Metaphors and Analogs for Race
- 2. Same World, Different Worldviews: Not ALL the Black Kids Sat Together in the Cafeteria
- 3. The Arc of a Bad Idea: Race and Racialization in Five Epochs
- PART II: TRANSCENDING RACE
- 4. Who Are The Race Transcenders? Narratives of Non-racial Identity Development
- 5. Race Transcendence, Race Consciousness and Post-race
- PART III: IMPLICATIONS OF THE NONRACIAL WORLDVIEW
- 6. Race Without Reification: Pedagogy, Practice and Policy from a Non-racial Perspective
- 7. Beyond the Panopticon: Liberating the Tragic Essentialist and Promoting Racial Disobedience
- Appendixes:
- Appendix A: Pre-interview Background Information Form
- Appendix B: Semi-structured Open-ended Interview Questions and Interview Domains Matrix
- References
- Index