Winning the Race: Beyond the Crisis in Black America

by John McWhorter

Paperback, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

305.896073

Collection

Publication

Gotham (2006), Paperback, 448 pages

Description

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, incarceration rates, teenage pregnancy and out-of- wedlock births, and educational failures. For years, pundits have blamed these problems on forces outside the black community. But now, in a broad-ranging re-envisioning of the post-Civil Rights black American experience, author 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 the poisonous effects of this defeatist attitude. McWhorter puts forth a new vision of black leadership, arguing that both blacks and whites must abolish the culture of victimhood.--From publisher description.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member JamesT
Dr. McWhorter debucks, dismantles and smashes all excuses for black failure in this country. Using history, sociology and a percing insight, Dr. McWhoter shines the light of truth on the past, the future and Black Americans role in it!

Awards

Dayton Literary Peace Prize (Longlist — Nonfiction — 2006)
NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work (Nominee — Nonfiction — 2006)

Physical description

448 p.; 5.4 inches

ISBN

1592402704 / 9781592402700
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