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- Book[compiled by] Paula S. Rothenberg, William Paterson University of New Jersey ; with contributions from Soniya Munshi, Borough of Manhattan Community College.Summary: "Vital, eye-opening, and powerful, this unique anthology expertly presents the significance and complexity of whiteness today and illuminates the nature of privilege and power in our society. White Privilege leads students through the ubiquity and corresponding invisibility of whiteness; the historical development of whiteness and its role in race relations over time; the real everyday effects of privilege and its opposite, oppression; and finally, how our system of privilege can be changed"--Back cover.
Contents:
Preface
Introduction
part 1. Whiteness: the power of invisibility. The matter of whiteness / Richard Dyer
Failing to see / Harlon Dalton
The invisible whiteness of being / Derald Wing Sue
Representing whiteness in the black imagination / bell hooks
Dead black man, just walking / William David Hart
Questions for thinking, writing, and discussion for part one
part 2. Whiteness: the power of the past. The roots of racial classification / Philip C. Wander, Judith N. Martin, and Thomas K. Nakayama
The Chinese exclusion example / Erika Lee
How white people became white folks / James E. Barrett and David Roediger
How Jews became white folks / Karen Brodkin
Becoming Hispanic: Mexican Americans and whiteness / Neil Foley
The possessive investment in whiteness / George Lipsitz
Global white supremacy / Charles W. Mills
Neither black nor white / Angelo N. Ancheta
Questions for thinking, writing, and discussion for part two
part 3. Whiteness: the power of privilege. Making systems of privilege visible / Stephanie M. Wildman with Adrienne D. Davis
Privilege as paradox / Allan G. Johnson
White privilege: unpacking the invisible knapsack / Peggy McIntosh
White privilege, white supremacy / Robert Jensen
Membership has its privileges: thoughts on acknowledging and challenging whiteness / Tim Wise
Are Iranians people of color?: Persian, Muslim, and model minority race politics / Alex Shams
My class didn't trump my race: using oppression to face privilege / Robin DiAngelo
I taught my black kids that their elite upbringing would protect them from discrimination. I was wrong / Lawrence Otis Graham
Where do we go after Ferguson? / Michael Eric Dyson
Questions for thinking, writing, and discussion for part three
part 4. Whiteness: the power of resistance. Breaking the silence / Beverly Tatum
Confronting one's own racism / Joe Feagin and Hernan Vera
How white people can serve as allies to people of color in the struggle to end racism / Paul Kivel
Questions for thinking, writing, and discussion for part four. - ArticleSmith LD.Health Lab Sci. 1978 Apr;15(2):74-80.Soil samples taken every fifty miles on four east-west transects across the United States were examined for C. botulinum and C. tetani, organisms that could inhibit the growth of C. botulinum type A, and for various soil properties. Type A strains were found mostly in the western part of the United States, in neutral to alkaline soil. Type B strains were more uniformly distributed, with a majority of them occurring east of the Mississippi River; none, however, were found in samples taken in the southermost transect. They were associated with soil of high organic content. Type C strains were found only in acid soil of the Gulf Coast, and type D strains in alkaline soil of some western states. Type E strains were mostly associated with damp to wet soil. Organisms inhibitory to type A strains were found in 4 of 21 samples of soil in which type A strains were demonstrated and in 7 of 20 samples in which they were not. Trypsin activation of culture fluids was necessary for the demonstration of most strains of types B, C, D, and E. C. tetani was demonstrated in 30 per cent of the soil samples. Its occurrence was not correlated with any particular soil type or climatic area.
- BookDigital Access Full text via HathiTrust, v. 1-2, no. 21.