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The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of
Apartheid Schooling in America
Jonathan Kozol
ISBN: 1400052440
Format: Hardcover, 416pp
Pub. Date: September 2005
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
BBP Sales Rank: 956
List Price: $25.00
BBP Price: $18.75 Save 25% |
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
"The nation needs to be confronted with the crime that we're committing and the
promises we are betraying. This is a book about betrayal of the young, who have
no power to defend themselves. It is not intended to make readers comfortable."
Over the past several years, Jonathan Kozol has visited nearly 60 public
schools. Virtually everywhere, he finds that conditions have grown worse for
inner-city children in the 15 years since federal courts began dismantling the
landmark ruling in Brown v. Board of Education. First, a state of nearly
absolute apartheid now prevails in thousands of our schools. The segregation of
black children has reverted to a level that the nation has not seen since 1968.
Few of the students in these schools know white children any longer. Second, a
protomilitary form of discipline has now emerged, modeled on stick-and-carrot
methods of behavioral control traditionally used in prisons but targeted
exclusively at black and Hispanic children. And third, as high-stakes testing
takes on pathological and punitive dimensions, liberal education in our
inner-city schools has been increasingly replaced by culturally barren and
robotic methods of instruction that would be rejected out of hand by schools
that serve the mainstream of society.
Filled with the passionate voices of children and their teachers and some of
the most revered and trusted leaders in the black community, The Shame of the
Nation is a triumph of firsthand reporting that pays tribute to those
undefeated educators who persist against the odds, but directly challenges the
chilling practices now being forced upon our urban systems by the Bush
administration. In their place, Kozol offers a humane,dramatic challenge to our
nation to fulfill at last the promise made some 50 years ago to all our
youngest citizens.
From The Shame of the Nation
"I went to Washington to challenge the soft bigotry of low expectations," the
president said in his campaign for reelection in September 2004. "It's working.
It's making a difference." It is one of those deadly lies, which, by sheer
repetition, is at length accepted by large numbers of Americans as, perhaps, a
rough approximation of the truth. But it is not the truth, and it is not an
innocent misstatement of the facts. It is a devious appeasement of the
heartache of the parents of the poor and, if it is not forcefully resisted and
denounced, it is going to lead our nation even further in a perilous direction.
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