With this book, Professor Camara provides fresh insights into the topical theme of race relations. He uses Schutz’s phenomenological social psychology and its focus on meaning to elucidate the construction of self and identity. His subtle analysis reveals how self and identity emerge from the internalization of social meanings assigned to situations, events, and persons. In racially-binary societies such as the U.S., these consist of many racial meanings, definitions, and taxonomies which are taken for granted but prove harmful to the racialized subjectivities. This explains the perpetuation of the otherness of racial minorities in spite of the structural changes and improvements of minority-group life, and reveals the political relevance of the Schutzian approach.
— Thomas S. Eberle, University of St. Gallen
After summarizing the history of U.S. racial relationships and their theoretical investigation, Evandro Camara insightfully explores how systemic racial 'typifications,' á la Alfred Schutz, have produced racial essentialism. Hence, long after Jim Crow’s demise, racialized minorities are still impeded from achieving the social integration possible for white ethnics or Schutz’s Stranger or Homecomer. Even multiculturalism and identity politics reflect race’s absolute structurization of social life, so that racial conflicts perdure and racial minorities remain unassimilable, permanent others and strangers. Racial typifications do not totalize absolutely, though, the free subjectivity of phenomenology. Camara’s book, a tour de force, provokes and disturbs.
— Michael D. Barber, Saint Louis University
The Critical Phenomenology of Intergroup Life fills an essential void in the sociological literature by considering the pervasive sense of strangeness (otherness) experienced by racial minorities in the United States.That race is a social construction, and not a substantive biological characteristic has become a truism in the social sciences over the last twenty years. Adeptly applying insights from the phenomenology of Alfred Schutz, Camara moves beyond race as a social construction to show how systems of racial inequality are not just empirical problems, but also matters of intersubjectivity, issues of a shared and taken for granted social consciousness. This book is filled with insightful historical and theoretical analysis and is vital for anyone interested in race and race relations.
— Jerry Williams, Stephen F. Austin State University
Why is racism so persistent? How do we deal with it? Is it possible to have a racism-free society? Evandro Camara deals with these and other questions which are not only fundamental, but also current. Based on the best tradition of social phenomenology, he keenly depicts the ontological structure of the social world as composed of different groups and shows that group relations are usually complicated. Hopefully, understanding how society works will help us find a way to equality.
— Carlos Belvedere, University of Buenos Aires