Seeing Whiteness

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A01=Robin DiAngelo
and white identity
anti-racist parenting
antiracist action
Author_Robin DiAngelo
Black Lives Matter
Category=JB
Category=JBFA
Category=JBSL1
Category=JMH
Category=JNF
Category=JPQB
civil rights
colorblindness and race
critical social justice pedagogy
discourse analysis
discrimination
diversity
dominant culture
entitlement
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
equity
faculty hiring committees
George Floyd
Ibram X. Kendi
individualism
institutional racism
links between white supremacy
meritocracy
meritocracy and racism
multicultural education
obscuring structural racism
oppression and white privilege
positionality
post-racial blindness
privilege
protecting structural racism
race
race-based stress
racial arrogance
racial belonging
racial discussions
racism in america
racism in society
school choice
segregation
social psychology
socialization
socioloogy
sociopolitical forces of race
structural racism
systemic inequities
systemic racism
systems of racial injustice
U.S. history
white dominant culture
White fragility
white identity
white silence
White solidarity
white supremacy

Product details

  • ISBN 9780807768549
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Oct 2023
  • Publisher: Teachers' College Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Long before the widespread success of the 2018 book White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism, Robin DiAngelo was breaking with white solidarity and writing, speaking, and teaching on the relationship among white supremacy, structural racism, and white identity. In this volume, DiAngelo has gathered a selection of her groundbreaking works leading up to White Fragility. Speaking as a white person to her fellow white people, she seamlessly blends the personal with the political. The result is an engaging and provocative analysis of the sociopolitical forces of race that shape our lives. Taking up familiar ideologies such as individualism and meritocracy, she breaks down how these concepts function to protect and obscure structural racism. Collectively, these essays show how racism infuses our society and its institutions; it is a system that goes well beyond individual intentions or conscious acts of meanness. By changing the question from if we are part of systemic racism to how each of us plays a part, DiAngelo’s body of work provides a transformative framework for white identity and antiracist action.

Featured Essays:

Chapter 1: My Class Didn’t Trump My Race: Using Oppression to Face Privilege

Chapter 2: Why Can’t We All Just Be Individuals?

Chapter 3: "My Feelings Are Not About You": Personal Experience as a Move of Whiteness (with David Allen)

Chapter 4: Getting Slammed: White Depictions of Race Dialogues as Arenas of Violence (with Özlem Sensoy)

Chapter 5: Nothing to Add: A Challenge to White Silence in Racial Discussions

Chapter 6: White Fragility

Chapter 7: White Fragility Accessible

Chapter 8: “We Put It in Terms of 'Not-Nice': White Antiracists and Parenting (with Sarah Matlock)

Chapter 9: Respect Differences? Challenging the Common Guidelines in Social Justice Education

Chapter 10: Leaning In: A Student’s Guide to Engaging Constructively With Social Justice Content (with Özlem Sensoy)

Chapter 11: Showing What We Tell (with Darlene Flynn)

Chapter 12: “We Are All For Diversity, But…”: How Faculty Hiring Committees Reproduce Whiteness and Practical Suggestions for How They Can Change (with Özlem Sensoy)

Robin DiAngelo is an affiliate associate professor of education at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her publications include Is Everyone Really Equal? An Introduction to Key Concepts in Social Justice Education (2nd Ed.), cowritten with Özlem Sensoy, which received book awards from both the American Educational Studies Association and the Society of Professors of Education.

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