Blackballed: The Black and White Politics of Race on America's Campuses

Blackballed: The Black and White Politics of Race on America's Campuses

by Lawrence Ross

Narrated by Ron Butler

Unabridged — 8 hours, 40 minutes

Blackballed: The Black and White Politics of Race on America's Campuses

Blackballed: The Black and White Politics of Race on America's Campuses

by Lawrence Ross

Narrated by Ron Butler

Unabridged — 8 hours, 40 minutes

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Overview

"College" is a word that means many things to many people: a space for knowledge, a place to gain lifelong friends, and an opportunity to transcend one's socioeconomic station. Today, though, this word also recalls a slew of headlines that have revealed a dark and persistent world of racial politics on campus.

From Lawrence Ross, author of The Divine Nine, Blackballed is an explosive and controversial book that rips the veil off America's hidden secret: America's colleges have fostered a racist environment that makes them a hostile space for African American students. Blackballed exposes the white fraternity and sorority system, with traditions of racist parties, songs, and assaults on black students; and the universities themselves, who name campus buildings after racist men and women. It also takes a deep dive into anti-affirmative action policies, and how they effectively segregate predominately white universities, providing ample room for white privilege. A bold mix of history and the current climate, Blackballed is a call to action for universities to make radical changes to their policies and standards to foster a better legacy for all students.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

12/14/2015
Ross (The Divine Nine) scrutinizes “some of the most racially hostile places in the United States”—the fraternities and sororities on American colleges and universities—via extended conversations with black former students of predominantly white institutions. He revisits some well-known incidents, such as the racist song performed by Sigma Alpha Epsilon of the University of Oklahoma in 2015, and discusses the types of racism black students encounter on college campuses, ranging from violent or overt acts to more common micro-aggressions (everyday indignities, whether intentional or not, that are often written off as inconsequential by other students). The special value of Ross’s book is that it documents incidents in recent history and the experiences of the students involved to show the severity of racism on college campuses and its persistence. As Ross points out, even when there are probations and suspensions, old patterns quickly return; he questions whether “going to a predominantly white institution is really worth it for African-Americans.” Agent: Jan Miller, Dupree/Miller & Associates. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

"The tendency for campus leaders, as well as the perpetrators, to minimize and trivialize issues of race on college campuses is what author Lawrence Ross tackles in his new book, Blackballed...Ross reminds us that highly visible examples of campus racism in the 21st century are not difficult to come by." --HuffPost College

"Racism, Ross argues, has been a fact of life for black students on predominantly white campuses for nearly 200 years...Ross...calls for efforts to make campuses more welcoming to black students, increases in the numbers of black students and faculty members, reform of the Greek system, and far more diversity training for all members of the campus community." --The Washington Post

"Blackballed...examines what colleges and universities are often not ready for: reality. The reality that across the nation, multitudes of African-American, Latino and Asian-American students feel marginalized on their campuses." --The Root

"Insightful ... Ross should be read along with Michelle Alexander, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Claudia Rankine." --Booklist

"The special value of Ross's book is that it documents incidents in recent history and the experiences of the students involved to show the severity of racism on college campuses and its persistence...he questions whether 'going to a predominantly white institution is really worth it for African-Americans.'" --Publishers Weekly

"Americans always say that the best way to end racism and bigotry is through education. But Blackballed makes it clear that our nation's institutions of higher learning are places where that doesn't just happen; its where bigotry is practiced, reinforced and make more palatable in the 21st century. Jim Crow may have been embodied by a cigar chompin' white racist sheriff in the South, but Lawrence Ross makes plain that his children and grandchildren have a command of the English language and carry the title of professor." --Roland Martin, journalist

"An impassioned indictment of racism in predominantly white institutions of higher learning...may fuel much-needed conversation." --Kirkus Reviews

"Blackballed
is a powerful and timely work. A must read for those on colleges campuses and off. Unflinching, thorough, and thoughtful, Ross has engineered a hard-hitting book that shatters the myth of the 'isolated incident'. Blackballed is a game changer." -- MK Asante, Professor at Morgan State University and bestselling author of Buck

"That cold, old man, Racism, is still seeking warmth on our college campus. Lawrence Ross has pulled that blanket away leaving Racism without cover: no welcome, no understanding, no warmth. College should be a time of enlightenment: inquiry, curiosity, questioning. We have discovered salt water on Mars indicating the possibility of life on our sister planet. Maybe we can eliminate hate yielding the possibility of life on Earth." --Nikki Giovanni, Poet

"Blackballed makes a sorely needed contribution to the literature on race and higher education. This carefully researched and beautifully written text serves as a sobering reminder that "Post-Racial America" remains a myth, even in the hallowed halls of post-secondary schooling. With deep analysis and urgent examples, Ross shows how anti-Black racism pervades our nations campuses from the classroom to fraternity row. This book cements Lawrence Ross's reputation as one of the nation's most lucid, insightful, and courageous writers on race, culture, and education." --Marc Lamont Hill, Distinguished Professor of Africana Studies, Morehouse College

"Parents and high school counselors of black kids must read this book. They will learn that the grass is not always greener at predominantly white universities, and in fact, the grass is often infested with racism. For decades, predominantly white colleges have been seen as better options for black students than HBCUs. Blackballed reveals the price many black students are paying for this choice." --Walter Kimbrough, President, Dillard University

"Amid the volatility of race in America the nation's college campuses have often been uniquely troubled. Lawrence Ross has written a crucial exploration of racism in higher education and its implications for the society at large. Were there a syllabus for understanding race in America Blackballed required reading." -Dr. William Jelani Cobb, Director, Africana Studies Institute

From the Publisher - AUDIO COMMENTARY

"An impassioned indictment of racism in predominantly white institutions of higher learning." —Kirkus

Library Journal

01/01/2016
The zeitgeist nature of Ross's (The Divine Nine) work lends credibility to his thesis that American university campuses are extensions of our racist society at large and have therefore become unsafe and hostile environments for black students. One needs to look no further than disturbingly frequent headlines to see the evidence—the day this reviewer received Ross's book, the president of the University of Missouri had resigned over race issues on that campus. The author's assertion that campuses are hotbeds of racial friction is illuminated through myriad examples of the ways in which campus race relations are allowed to maintain white supremacy. Campus hate crimes leaked to the press are rationalized routinely by skittish administrators. As Ross proves, these crimes (often, "jokes") are not outlier actions undertaken mindlessly by tolerant and kind, if privileged and drunk, white students. Further, the university, through excusing generations of behavior, becomes complicit in these expressions, effectively robbing black students of a place on campus. Ross ends the book with a call to arms that asks universities to "move campus racism from the backwaters of their administrations to the forefront," equalizing enrollments through affirmative action and standing up to the strongholds of campus racism, fraternities and sororities, despite their creation of an alumni donor class. VERDICT Highly recommended for high school junior and seniors, college students, and educators.—Jewell Anderson, Savannah Country Day Sch. Lib., GA

Kirkus Reviews

2015-11-03
An impassioned indictment of racism in predominantly white institutions of higher learning.With the election of Barack Obama, argues journalist Ross (Money Shot: The Wild Nights and Lonely Days in Black Porn, 2007, etc.), Americans have been "seduced, and deluded, by the idea that we're now in a new state of racial being, a postracial world where race is insignificant." The reality, he writes, is far different, notably on college campuses, where African-American students encounter "some of the most racially hostile spaces in the United States," even in schools that promote rhetoric of diversity and openness. Ross traces the history of affirmative action policies, student activism, and institutional response to racist incidents on campus, and he focuses extensively on fraternities and sororities, where he finds racism endemic and "white privilege…codified." Taking into account all of the racism he documents, Ross asks whether "going to a predominantly white institution is really worth it for African Americans." Some students have declined to do so: "Highly sought-after African American students who get into the Michigans, Berkeleys, and University of Floridas" note the "paltry African American student populations of these flagship schools" and respond, "Why bother?" They choose, instead, to go to smaller private schools or historically black colleges. Most who do attend "arrive from hyper-segregated schools and neighborhoods" and find their experiences duplicated on campus. Although some schools boast of their efforts to monitor and respond to racism, Ross finds "African American Studies offices, Multicultural Affairs departments, and Greek life offices…woefully understaffed and underfunded." When racist incidents occur, "the penalty…is basically the equivalent of a hand slap." To counter this inertia, the author makes a forceful call for African-American students to create "a national Black Congress of Students" to work for reform. "Racism is icky to talk about, as everyone usually retreats to their comfortable box when dealing with it," Ross admits, but his biting critique may fuel much-needed conversation.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171073190
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 02/02/2016
Edition description: Unabridged
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