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Winning the Race: Beyond the Crisis in Black
America
John McWhorter
ISBN: 1592401880
Format: Hardcover, 352pp
Pub. Date: December 2005
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
List Price: $27.50
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
A provocative new look at the true sources of the social scourges that are
holding back black America-and an impassioned manifesto for change.
Four decades after the great victories of the Civil Rights Movement secured
equal rights for African-Americans, black America is in crisis. Indeed, by most
measurable standards, conditions for many blacks have grown worse since 1965:
desperate poverty cripples communities nationwide, incarceration rates have
reached record highs, teenage pregnancy and out-of- wedlock births are rampant,
and educational failures are stifling achievement among the next generation.
For years, prominent sociologists and pundits have blamed these problems on
forces outside the black community, from lingering racism, to the explosion of
the inner-city drug trade, to the erosion of the urban industrial base and the
migration of middle-class blacks to the suburbs. But now, in an important and
broad-ranging re-envisioning of the post-Civil Rights black American
experience, acclaimed author John McWhorter tears down these theories to expose
the true roots of today's crisis, and to show a new way forward.
In Winning the Race, McWhorter argues that black America's current problems
began with an unintended byproduct of the Civil Rights revolution, a crippling
mindset of "therapeutic alienation." This wary stance toward mainstream
American culture, although it is a legacy of racism in the past, continues to
hold blacks back, and McWhorter traces all the poisonous effects of this
defeatist attitude. In an in-depth case study of the Indianapolis inner city,
he analyzes how a vibrant black neighborhood declined into slums, despite ample
work opportunities in an American urban center where manufacturing jobs were
plentiful. McWhorter takes a hard look at the legacy of the Great Society
social assistance programs, lamenting their teaching people to live permanently
on welfare, as well as educational failures, too often occurring because of an
intellectual climate in which a successful black person must be faced with
charges of "acting white." He attacks the sorry state of black popular culture,
where indignation for its own sake has been enshrined in everything from the
halls of academia to the deleterious policy decisions of community leaders to
the disaffected lyrics of hip-hop, particularly rap's glorification of
irresponsibility and violence as "protest." In a stirring conclusion, McWhorter
puts forth a new vision of black political and intellectual leadership, arguing
that both blacks and whites must abolish the culture of victimhood, as this
alone can improve future of black America, and outlines steps that can be taken
to ensure hope for the future.
Powerful and provocative, Winning the Race combines detailed research with
precise argumentation to present a compelling new vision for black America.
Acclaim for Winning the Race:
"This is the work of a serious man who knows what the demons are and realizes
that they must be identified and fought, not glibly redefined so as to maintain
the old order of mush-mouthed ineffectiveness."
-Stanley Crouch, author of The Artificial White Man and The All-American Skin
Game, Or the Decoy of Race
"John McWhorter demolishes the liberal conventional wisdom about the sources of
poverty, crime, family breakdown, and other social ills that afflict the black
community today, and offers a compelling alternative vision of how to move
beyond the current crisis. Winning the Race is a must-read for anyone with a
serious interest in the problem of race in modern America."
-Stephan Thernstrom and Abigail Thernstrom, authors of America in Black and
White: One Nation, Indivisible and No Excuses: How to Close the Racial Gap in
Learning
Author Biography:
JOHN MCWHORTER is the author of ten books, including the New York Times
bestseller Losing the Race, the San Francisco Chronicle bestseller The Power of
Babel, and most recently Doing Our Own Thing (Gotham Books, 2003). A senior
fellow at the Manhattan Institute, he holds a Ph.D. in Linguistics from
Stanford University and is a frequent media commentator on race, language, and
culture.
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