By the Color of Our Skin: The Illusion of Integration and the Reality of Race

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Description

While signs of racial progress are everywhere, the reality is that America is hardly more integrated than it was before the civil rights movement. Beyond the rhetoric of politicians, the media, and the prevalent symbols of integration lies a very different reality: 70 percent of black children attend predominantly black schools; and an Hispanic or Asian American with a third grade education is more likely to live in an integrated neighborhood than is a black with a Ph.D. Fueled by these startling statistics, By the Color of Our Skin argues that integration does not exist now; that it never had a chance to exist in the past; and that it will never exist in the future.Leonard Steinhorn and Barbara Diggs-Brown would themselves like to see integration become a reality but find–through polls, statistics, interviews, and anecdotes–that the illusion of integration is more damaging than useful because it keeps society from having an honest dialogue about the problem of race. By the Color of Our Skin explodes powerful myths and outlines a new vision of race in America.

Additional information

Weight0.3 kg
Dimensions2.3 × 13.5 × 20.4 cm
PubliCanadation City/Country

USA

ISBN 10

0452278732

About The Author

Barbara Diggs-Brown is an associate professor of public communication at the American University School of Communication. She writes and lectures on cultural diversity in the media and has served as a media and press adviser for political campaigns, public officials, and advocacy groups. She lives outside of Washington, D.C.

Table Of Content

AcknowledgmentsPrefacePart One: Integration Illusion, Integration Reality1. The Integration Illusion2. A Day in the Life of Two Americas, Part I: Living, Learning, Working Apart3. A Day in the Life of Two Americas, Part II: Praying, Playing, Entertaining Apart4. The Motown Metaphor and the Promised Land of the 1960sPart Two: How Did We Get Here? 5. What Keeps Us Apart?6. Virtual Integration: How the Integration of Mass Media Undermines Integration7. Noble Negro, Angry Black, Urban Outlaw: The Iconography of Our Racial Separation8. The Perception Gap9. Rhetorical Integration: The Political Exploitation of a DreamPart Three: Where Do We Go from Here? 10. Can Integration Work?11. Toward a More Racially Honest AmericaPostscriptNotesAuthors' InterviewsIndex

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