Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 336
Trim: 7 x 9¼
978-0-7425-1480-5 • Hardback • March 2005 • $159.00 • (£123.00)
978-0-7425-1481-2 • Paperback • March 2005 • $62.00 • (£48.00)
978-0-7425-6873-0 • eBook • March 2005 • $58.50 • (£45.00)
George Yancy is McAnulty Fellow in the Philosophy Department at Duquesne University.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Introduction
Part 3 Part I: White on White
Chapter 4 Waking Up White and in Memphis
Chapter 5 White and Cracking Up
Chapter 6 "Wigger"
Chapter 7 Unmasking through Naming: Toward an Ethic and Africology of Whiteness
Chapter 8 Meditations on Post-Supremacist Philosophy
Chapter 9 Racialization as an Aesthetic Production: What Does the Aesthetic Do for Whiteness and Blackness and Vice Versa?
Chapter 10 "Circulez! Il n'y a rien à voir," Or, "Seeing White": From Phenomenology to Psychoanalysis and Back
Part 11 Part II: Black on Black
Chapter 12 (Re)Conceptualizing Blackness and Making Race Obsolescent
Chapter 13 Blackness as an Ethical Trope: Toward a Post-Western Assertion
Chapter 14 Tongue Smell Color black
Chapter 15 "Seeing Blackness" from Within The Manichean Divide
Chapter 16 Blackness and the Quest for Authenticity
Chapter 17 Act Your Age and Not Your Color: Blackness as Material Conditions, Presumptive Context, and Social Category
Chapter 18 Knowing Blackness, Becoming Blackness, Valuing Blackness
Yancy's anthology, with its collection of philosophers of race, makes flesh of the oft-challenged pairing of race and philosophy—sinuous tissues of identity, autobiography, history, and ideology.
— T. Sharpley-Whiting, professor of African American studies and French, and director of African American studies at Vanderbilt University
George Yancy's brilliant and thought-provoking White on White/Black on Black is a major contribution to the literature of the study of the changing dynamics of race in contemporary American life.
— Manning Marable, Ph.D., professor of history and political science, and founding director of the Institute for Research in African-American Studies at C
George Yancy has assembled a most important collection of essays that challenge the white supremacist cultural and intellectual domination of philosophy, a discipline that has traditionally denied black humanity. Philosophers and non-philosophers alike will benefit from these thought-provoking essays. White on White/Black on Black demands and demonstrates the transformation of philosophy.
— Floyd W. Hayes, III, Johns Hopkins University
Critical race theory needs to be done. In this text, a philosophically grounded critical race theory is done very well. This volume, in which Cornel West offers a foreword, partly serves as a key philosophical intervention onto the scene of critical whiteness studies. Along with the groundbreaking works by David Roediger and David Theo Goldberg, the first half of this text presents white scholars writing on their experiences of, and critical thoughts on, whiteness. Chapters of note include those by Robert Bernasconi, Anna Stubblefield, and Bettina Bergo. The second half of the text is, as can now be expected of Yancy's editorial mastery, brilliant. The black philosophers' contributions to this volume, especially those by Clarence Shole Johnson, Robert Birt, and Kal Alston, offer critical engagements in the discipline known as critical race theory, a domain mistakenly reserved for critical legal scholars, historians, and sociologists. Highly recommended. All academic levels/libraries.
— Choice Reviews
White on White/Black on Black presents readers with an array of illustrations of the way in which philosophizing about or from one's life can, in fact contribute to the living of that life. The book can serve as an invitation to take up the project of theorizing with, through, about, and beyond one's own life; and to consider theorizing as a tool one might take up in one's quest for social transformation... a useful, intriguingly-designed contribution to the philosophy of race.
— Journal of Speculative Philosophy
Once again, an engrossing collection by George Yancy! Whites critique whiteness and Blacks reaffirm blackness—all revealing much about themselves, their views of philosophy, and the American quicksand of race.
— Naomi Zack, Lehman College, CUNY
By calling upon the academic community to value Blackness and challenge white supremacist cultural values, this text provides a provocative contribution to the study of race relations in America today.
— The European Legacy – Toward New Paradigms