Faces At The Bottom Of The Well: The Permanence Of Racism

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Basic Books, Aug 1, 2008 - Law - 416 pages
The classic work on American racism and the struggle for racial justice

In Faces at the Bottom of the Well, civil rights activist and legal scholar Derrick Bell uses allegory and historical example to argue that racism is an integral and permanent part of American society. African American struggles for equality are doomed to fail so long as the majority of whites do not see their own well-being threatened by the status quo. Bell calls on African Americans to face up to this unhappy truth and abandon a misplaced faith in inevitable progress. Only then will blacks, and those whites who join with them, be in a position to create viable strategies to alleviate the burdens of racism. "Freed of the stifling rigidity of relying unthinkingly on the slogan 'we shall overcome,'" he writes, "we are impelled both to live each day more fully and to examine critically the actual effectiveness of traditional civil rights remedies."

Faces at the Bottom of the Well is urgent and essential reading on the problem of racism in America.

 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
A Limited Legacy
15
The Afrolantica Awakening
32
The Racial PreferenceLicensing Act
47
The Last Black Hero
65
Divining a Racial Realism Theory
89
The Rules of Racial Standing
109
A Law Professors Protest
127
Racisms Secret Bonding
147
The Space Traders
158
E P I L O G U E
195
N O T E S
201
I N D E X
215
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