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This Week's Suggested Book from the Ashbrook Center (Week of September 22, 1997)
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America in Black and White: One Nation, IndivisibleStephen Thernstrom and Abigail Thernstrom
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The "American Dilemma," Gunnar Myrdal called the problem of race in his classic 1944 book. More than half a century later, race remains the issue that dwarfs all others - the problem that doesn't get solved and won't go away. But in the decades since Myrdal wrote, much has changed, say the authors of America in Black and White. Progress - too little acknowledged - has been heartening. Pessimists talk of the "permanence of racism," and say that things are as bad as ever. In fact, the authors show, the status of blacks has been transformed in recent decades, and there is no going back. Problems remain, of course. But they will not be solved by traditional civil rights strategies, the authors argue. Affirmative action programs, for instance, do nothing to help the black underclass. Racial preferences cannot rescue the high school dropout who is too unskilled for the modern world of work. Racial progress ultimately depends on our common understanding that we are one nation, indivisible
- that we sink or swim together, that black poverty impoverishes us all, and that black alienation eats at the nation's soul.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Part. 1. History
Chapter 1. Jim Crow
Chapter 2. The Promised Land
Chapter 3. Remarkable Change
Chapter 4. Amazing Patience
Chapter 5. We Shall Overcome
Chapter 6. Coming Together - and Apart
Part. 2. Out of the Sixties: Recent Social, Economic, and Political Trends
Chapter 7. The Rise of the Black Middle Class
Chapter 8. Cities and Suburbs
Chapter 9. Poverty
Chapter 10. Crime
Chapter 11. Politics
Part. 3. Equality and Preferences: The Changing Racial Climate
Chapter 12. With All Deliberate Speed
Chapter 13. Skills, Tests, and Diversity
Chapter 14. The Higher Learning
Chapter 15. Jobs and Contracts
Chapter 16. Voting Rights
Chapter 17. The Racial Climate
Conclusion: One Nation, Indivisible
Simon & Schuster
$32.50, 1997
Hardcover, 480 pages
ISBN: 0-684-80933-8
Previous Books of the Week
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