1st Edition
Cultural and Literary Critiques of the Concepts of Race
Edited By E. Nathaniel Gates
Copyright 1997
418 Pages
by
Routledge
Explores the concept of race The term race, which originally denoted genealogical or class identity, has in the comparatively brief span of 300 years taken on an entirely new meaning. In the wake of the Enlightenment it came to be applied to social groups. This ideological transformation coupled with a dogmatic insistence that the groups so designated were natural, and not socially created,... Read more
Volume Introduction, On Being White and Other Lies, White, Representations of Whiteness in the Black Imagination, Optic White: Blackness and the Production of Whiteness, By the Rivers of Babylon: Race in the United States, Slavery, Race and the Languages of Class: Wage Slaves and White Niggers, Race and Nature: The System of Marks, The No-Drop Rule, White Philosophy, Beyond Essentialism: Rethinking Afro-American Cultural Theory, Race under Representation, Romancing the Shadow, What's Love Got To Do With It?: Critical Theory, Integrity, and the Black Idiom, Fear of a Black Planet: Race, Identity Politics, and Common Sense, The Repressed Community: Locating the New Communitarianism, The New Cultural Politics of Difference, Race, Articulation and Societies Structured in Dominance, New Ethnicities, Toward a Critical Theory of Race, Acknowledgments
Biography
E. Nathaniel Gates






