Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 272
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-8476-9692-5 • Hardback • January 2000 • $153.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-8476-9693-2 • Paperback • January 2000 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Berel Lang is professor of humanities at Trinity College.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 I: Questioning the "Science" of Race
Chapter 3 1 Why Race is not a Biological Concept
Chapter 4 2 From Eighteenth to Nineteenth Century Racial Science: Continuity and Change
Chapter 5 3 The Meaning of "Race": Psychology's Troubled History
Chapter 6 4 Nazi Antisemitism and the "Science of Race"
Part 7 II: Between Race and Slavery: The Variations of Culture
Chapter 8 5 Race and Culture: Medieval Notions of Difference
Chapter 9 6 Enslavement and Manumission in Ancient Greece
Chapter 10 7 American Negro Slavery: A Reconsideration
Chapter 11 8 Genealogies of Race and Culture in Anthropology: The Marginalized Ethnographer
Part 12 III: Race and the Literary Imagination
Chapter 13 9 The Continental Fallacy of Race
Chapter 14 10 Getting BasiL Bambara's Re-visioning of the Black Aesthetic
Chapter 15 11 Beautiful Americans
Chapter 16 12 From Colonization to Immigration: The French School in Francophone African Fiction
Part 17 IV:Race or Class: Which is it?
Chapter 18 13 Economics and Motivation: (Dis)entangling Race and Class
Chapter 19 14 Race and Class: Why All the Confusion?
Chapter 20 15 Race and Medicine: The Black Experience
Chapter 21 16 The Race for Class
This is an excellent book that should be read by anyone interested in the theory of race.
— Race Relations Abstracts