1st Edition

Obama and Race History, Culture, Politics

Edited By Richard H King Copyright 2012
208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

In this collection, academics from both sides of the Atlantic analyze the confluence of a politician, a process, and a problem - Barack Obama, the 2008 US presidential election, and the 'problem' of race in contemporary America. The special focus falls upon Barack Obama himself, who appears in many guises: as an individual from biracial and transnational backgrounds; a skilled, urban... Read more

1. Obama and race: culture, history, politics Richard H. King, University of Nottingham, UK  2. The riddle of race Emily Bernard, University of Vermont, USA  3. ‘A curious relationship’: Barack Obama, the 1960s and the election of 2008 Brian Ward, University of Manchester, UK  4. Barack Hussein Obama: the use of history in the creation of an ‘American’ president George Lewis, University of Leicester, UK  5. Becoming black, becoming president Richard H. King, University of Nottingham, UK  6. Two great days in Harlem Carmel King, freelance photographer, UK  7. How to read Michelle Obama Maria Lauret, Sussex University, UK  8. Barack Obama and the American island of the colour blind Peter Kuryla, Belmont University, USA  9. Barack Obama as the post-racial candidate for a post-racial America: perspectives from Asian America and Hawaii Jonathan Y. Okamura, University of Hawaii, USA  10. Barack Obama and the South: demography as electoral opportunity Donald W. Beachler, Ithaca College, USA  11. Teaching Obama: history, critical race theory and social work education Damon Freeman, University of Pennsylvania, USA

Biography

Richard H. King is Professor Emeritus in the Department of American and Canadian Studies at the University of Nottingham, UK. He is author of Race, Culture and the Intellectuals, 1940-1970 (2004) and co-editor of Hannah Arendt and the Uses of History (2007, with Dan Stone). He is currently working on The American Arendt, a study of the influence of Hannah Arendt on American (and contemporary) thought and the impact living in America had upon Arendt and her work.