2001 Race Odyssey: African Americans and SociologyBruce R. Hare This seventeen-essay volume is a comprehensive assessment of the complex relationships of racism, sexism, and classism both within and between the Pan-African community and the larger American society. It offers new twenty-first-century approaches for cooperatively and simultaneously addressing these significant social problems. |
Contents
Toward Cultural Pluralism and Economic Justice | 3 |
Illustrations | 5 |
What African Americans Can Teach Sociology | 22 |
Copyright | |
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ability academic achievement affirmative action African American families African American sociologists African American women American Sociological Association argue behavior black Americans black and white black community black family black immigrants black women black youth capitalist challenge Civil Rights movement color context countries criminal cultural desegregation discipline discourse domestic dominant economic educational ethnic example experiences explain Franklin Frazier gender global groups Herrnstein historical identity individual inequality institutions intelligence Jim Crow Journal labor lineage linguistic turn mainstream ment middle class minority mobility Myrdal Native Americans Negro oppression organization percent persons perspective political population position poverty precolonial societies problem production programs protest race differences race relations racial racism relationship response role scholars segregated social class sociology sociology of race sociology's status stereotypes structure subdominant theory tion underclass United Univ University urban W. E. B. DuBois