Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Adolph L. Reed, Jr.

    Adolph Reed Jr. aborde les questions complexes du racisme et de la politique américaine dans son œuvre. Ses analyses se concentrent sur l'intersection des inégalités raciales et économiques, révélant les systèmes complexes qui perpétuent ces disparités. L'approche académique de Reed est reconnue pour son accent mis sur l'examen critique des structures sociales et de leur impact sur les individus. Son écriture offre un aperçu profond des défis persistants au sein de la société américaine.

    The South
    Stirrings In The Jug
    Class Notes
    • Class Notes

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,5(358)Évaluer

      Hailed by Publishers Weekly for its “forceful” and “bracing opinions on race and politics,” Class Notes is critic Adolph Reed Jr.’s latest blast of clear thinking on matters of race, class, and other American dilemmas. The book begins with a consideration of the theoretical and practical strategies of the U.S. left over the last three decades: Reed argues against the solipsistic approaches of cultural or identity politics, and in favor of class-based political interpretation and action.Class Notes moves on to tackle race relations, ethnic studies, family values, welfare reform, the so-called underclass, and black public intellectuals in essays called “head-spinning” and “brilliantly executed” by David Levering Lewis.Adolph Reed Jr. has earned a national reputation for his controversial evaluations of American politics. These essays illustrate why people like Katha Pollitt consider Reed “the smartest person of any race, class, or gender writing on race, class, and gender.”

      Class Notes
    • Skeptical of received wisdom, Reed casts a critical eye on political trends in the black community over the past thirty years. He examines the rise of a new black political class in the aftermath of the civil rights era, and bluntly denounces black leadership that is not accountable to a black constituency; such leadership, he says, functions as a proxy for white elites. Reed debunks as myths the 'endangered black male" and the "black underclass, " and punctures what he views as the exaggeration and self-deception surrounding the black power movement and the Malcolm X revival. He chastises the Left, too, for its failure to develop an alternative politics, then lays out a practical leftist agenda and reasserts the centrality of political action.

      Stirrings In The Jug
    • The South

      • 176pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      4,2(319)Évaluer

      A narrative account of Jim Crow as people experienced it.

      The South