The Constraint of Race offers a challenging new approach to understanding the evolution of American social policy and the racial politics shaping it. Rather than focusing on the disadvantages suffered by blacks in the American welfare state; Linda Faye Williams looks at the other side of the coin: the advantages enjoyed by whites. Her hope is that rendering the benefits of “white skin privilege†more visible will help undermine their acceptance as “normal†and motivate renewed efforts toward achieving a more just and equitable society. Williams begins her analysis by comparing two programs of federal provision in the mid-nineteenth century—the Freedmen’s Bureau and the Civil War Veterans’ Pension system. Already at this early stage of its development; she shows; the emerging welfare state effectively denied blacks the protections it provided white Americans and simultaneously stigmatized blacks as welfare “dependents.†The linkages among race; moral worthiness; and social policy established then have persisted to the present. Her reexamination of key episodes in the later evolution of the American welfare state from the New Deal through the Clinton administration reveals how developments in social policy have advanced the privileges attached to “whiteness†by a variety of mechanisms: the ongoing reinterpretation of the American tradition of liberal individualism in racialized ways; the slow accretion of policy legacies; the construction of “whiteness†itself as a political category; and the normal procedures of coalition building and electoral politics. Through these connected processes; whiteness and the protection of white privilege became fundamental to the operation of American democracy; and their centrality has been continually reinforced by social policy. The result has been a politics in which race is used as a weapon by political parties and candidates to constrain and turn back the American welfare state. Looking to the future; Williams concludes by considering the socioeconomic conditions and political mechanisms that might help overcome the iron grip that white privilege holds on American social politics. “There can be little genuine progress in solving the so-called race problem or in creating the kind of social citizenship all Americans deserve unless and until continuing white skin privilege is openly acknowledged and addressed. In effect; the problem of the twenty-first century is not the color line but finding a way to successfully challenge whiteness as ideology and reality.â€â€”From The Constraint of Race
#74233 in Books Vimalakirtinirdesa English 2003-08-11Original language:TibetanPDF # 1 9.00 x .44 x 6.00l; .64 #File Name: 0271006013117 pagesThe Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti
Review
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful. The Koan of the VoidBy Edward J. BartonThis is heavy duty Buddhist scripture. Thurman's prolouge and introduction do a great job of setting up the actual scripture reading itself. Considered advanced for adherents of Buddhist thought; for those that aren't (like myself); the introduction is critical - don't skip it. The proposition is that all is unified; and dualism is not real. The artifical dualism and the concept of voidness (the absence of dualism; not nihiilism) permeate the reading. The aparent paradox of an existent void is exactly the "Zen like" koan that is pondered and meditated on to attempt to understand the profundity of reality. A tough read; but a good one. A strong working knowledge of Buddhist thought will be very helpful before diving in.5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. The Vimalakirti SutraBy HeldenWe've been studying this Sutra for the past 5 semesters in one of our Zen Buddhism classes at Chung Tai Monastery Sunnyvale. This version--a different translation than the Burton Watson--is not the one we use. It's based on Tibetan sources. However; this translation has PRIMO notes! So I keep it at hand right along with my Watson. Very good for the serious Buddhism student.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy Phil"[T]hose living beings who; having heard this teaching of the Dharma; accept it; remember it; read it; and understand it deeply will be; without a doubt; true vessels of the Dharma... They will cut off all possibility of unhappy lives; will open their way to all fortunate lives; will always be looked after by all Buddhas; will always overcome all adversaries; and will always conquer all devils." So read it. What have you got to lose?