Notice of Public Meeting: Kalamazoo Public Library Board of Trustees | April 29th| 6 pm | Central Library/Van Deusen Room. The packet of information for the meeting can be found on the library’s website

Our website will be offline temporarily for scheduled maintenance beginning at 10pm on Sunday, April 28th.

NOTICE: The Eastwood Branch will be closed on April 29th & 30th for maintenance needs. 

Book

1 of 1 Copy Available

  • CENTRAL: Second Floor
Log In to Place HoldAdd Author AlertMore Details

Race and reckoning : from founding fathers to today's disruptors

Call Number

  • 305.8 C8342.1 (CEN)

Browse similar titles by call number

Edition

First edition.

Publication Information

New York : Amistad, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, [2022]

Physical Description

243 pages : 24 cm

Summary

"Bestselling author Ellis Cose's groundbreaking latest work interrogates pivotal decisions from enslavement to the New Deal to the handling of Covid that established the United States discriminatory practices for centuries to come. Numerous racialized decisions have solidified America's, and people of color's, fate at different points in history. The first were race-based slavery and the removal of Indigenous peoples from their land. More have proliferated over time as America became a superpower post World Wars while still discriminating against people of color who served overseas and at home through internment camps and the inability to vote. Presidents and state politicians have enacted and enforced legislation with the aims of bettering a nation, but bettering it for whom? From Reconstruction to the New Deal to the unceasing fight for the Civil Rights Bill and Voting Rights Act to the nation's unyielding sense of patriotism and belief in "the American Dream," each decision solidified the full rights of white people time and time again. In Race and Reckoning, journalist Ellis Cose dissects chapter-by-chapter how America's overall narrative breeds racial resentment rooted in conjecture over fact. Through rigorous research and astute details, Cose uncovers how countless points in history upheld a narrative of "what makes America great" thereby allowing one of the most disastrous presidencies in history to occur at a time when the world was at its most vulnerable"--

Contents

  • Choosing slavery
  • A vanishing middle ground
  • The South secedes
  • A tate of freedom before re-enslavement
  • A superpower burdened with apartheid
  • Who deserves to be American?
  • A New Deal for whom?
  • War on two fronts
  • Ending American apartheid
  • Rage, resistance, and the politics of resentment
  • Selling soap, falsehoods, and potential presidents
  • Repeating the past, creating a future.

Share: Facebook Twitter