Lexington Books
Pages: 134
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-7936-4042-0 • Hardback • October 2022 • $100.00 • (£77.00)
978-1-7936-4044-4 • Paperback • April 2024 • $39.99 • (£30.00)
978-1-7936-4043-7 • eBook • October 2022 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Leland Harper is assistant professor of philosophy at Siena Heights University.
Jennifer Kling is assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Land Acknowledgment
Chapter 1: The Dynamic Disaster of Racism
Chapter 2: The Semantic Foundations of White Fragility and the Consequences for Justice
Chapter 3: COVID-19 in Black America
Chapter 4: Shifting Toward Democracy and Justice
Chapter 5: Furthering the Claim
Chapter 6: Conversations
Chapter 7: The Expansion
Leland Harper and Jennifer Kling provide a semantic solution to the discursive impasse in thinking and talking about racism, by introducing race sensitivity. This move to expand “racist, not racist, and anti-racist” is an important contribution to cognitive approaches to “white fragility.”
— Naomi Zack, Lehman College, CUNY
Using the trope of dynamic disaster to characterize American racism and proposing a semantic response that does not put white people alleged to be racist on the defensive, Harper and Kling argue that linguistic enlightenment is vital for disrupting the racial status quo and securing racial progress. Defenders of racial justice, and students of the philosophy of race, will find much of value in this book.
— Derrick Darby, author of A Realistic Blacktopia