Conceptualizing Racism: Breaking the Chains of Racially Accommodative Language
Conceptualizing Racism is a provocative book that confronts the language we use to discuss and understand racism. Author Noel A. Cazenave argues that American social science has, since its inception, practiced linguistic racial accommodation that blurs our understanding of systemic racism and makes it difficult to effect meaningful change. Conceptualizing Racism highlights how words matter in racism studies. The author traces the history of linguistic racial accommodation through the development of sociology as a discipline and illustrates how it is at play today, not only within the discipline but in public life.
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Conceptualizing Racism: Breaking the Chains of Racially Accommodative Language
Conceptualizing Racism is a provocative book that confronts the language we use to discuss and understand racism. Author Noel A. Cazenave argues that American social science has, since its inception, practiced linguistic racial accommodation that blurs our understanding of systemic racism and makes it difficult to effect meaningful change. Conceptualizing Racism highlights how words matter in racism studies. The author traces the history of linguistic racial accommodation through the development of sociology as a discipline and illustrates how it is at play today, not only within the discipline but in public life.
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Conceptualizing Racism: Breaking the Chains of Racially Accommodative Language

Conceptualizing Racism: Breaking the Chains of Racially Accommodative Language

by Noel A. Cazenave
Conceptualizing Racism: Breaking the Chains of Racially Accommodative Language

Conceptualizing Racism: Breaking the Chains of Racially Accommodative Language

by Noel A. Cazenave

Hardcover

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Overview

Conceptualizing Racism is a provocative book that confronts the language we use to discuss and understand racism. Author Noel A. Cazenave argues that American social science has, since its inception, practiced linguistic racial accommodation that blurs our understanding of systemic racism and makes it difficult to effect meaningful change. Conceptualizing Racism highlights how words matter in racism studies. The author traces the history of linguistic racial accommodation through the development of sociology as a discipline and illustrates how it is at play today, not only within the discipline but in public life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442252356
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 11/19/2015
Pages: 270
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Noel A. Cazenave is professor of sociology at the University of Connecticut, where he also teaches in the Urban and Community Studies program. In addition to many journal articles, book chapters, and other publications, he coauthored Welfare Racism: Playing the Race Card against America’s Poor, which won five book awards, and has more recently published Impossible Democracy: The Unlikely Success of the War on PovertyCommunity Action Programs and The Urban Racial State: Managing Race Relations in American Cities.

Table of Contents

Prologue: Sociology as Autobiography
Introduction: Racial Accommodation and the Misconceptualization of Racism

  1. Understanding Linguistic Racial Accommodation and Confrontation
  2. Linguistic Racial Accommodation from Slavery to the Civil Rights Movement
  3. Linguistic Racial Accommodation and Confrontation from the Civil Rights Movement to The Declining Significance of Race
  4. Theoretical Fragmentation: The White Backlash and Its Legacy of Failure
  5. Defining Racism: Beyond Mini-Racism and the “Race” as Agency Concept
  6. Confronting Racially Accommodative Language by Conceptualizing Racism as a System of Oppression

Conclusion: Lessons Learned and Challenges Remaining: Toward a More Honest Conceptualization of Racism
Epilogue: Unfinished Business in Confronting Racially Accommodative Language
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