Cover image for How Racism Takes Place.
How Racism Takes Place.
Title:
How Racism Takes Place.
Author:
Lipsitz, George.
ISBN:
9781439902578
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (320 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Introduction: Race, Place, and Power -- Sectiom 1: Social Imaginaries and Social Relations -- 1. The White Spatial Imaginary -- 2. The Black Spatial Imaginary -- Section II: Spectatorship and Citizenship -- 3. Space, Sports, and Spectatorship in St. Louis -- 4. The Crime The Wire Couldn't Name: Social Decay and Cynical Detachment in Baltimore -- A Bridge for This Book - Weapons of the Weak and Weapons of the Strong -- Section III: Visible Archives -- 5. Horace Tapscott and the World Stage in Los Angeles -- 6. John Biggers and Project Row Houses in Houston -- Sectiom IV: Invisible Archives -- 7. Betye Saar's Los Angeles and Paule Marshall's Brooklyn -- 8. Something Left to Love: Lorraine Hansberry's Chicago -- Section V: Race and Place Today -- 9. New Orleans Today: We Know This Place -- 10. A Place Where Everybody Is Somebody -- Notes -- Acknowledgments -- Index.
Abstract:
White identity in the United States is place bound, asserts George Lipsitz in How Racism Takes Place. An influential scholar in American and racial studies, Lipsitz contends that racism persists because a network of practices skew opportunities and life chances along racial lines. That is, these practices assign people of different races to different spaces and therefore allow grossly unequal access to education, employment, transportation, and shelter. Revealing how seemingly race-neutral urban sites contain hidden racial assumptions and imperatives, Lipsitz examines the ways in which urban space and social experience are racialized and emphasizes that aggrieved communities do not passively acquiesce to racism. He recognizes the people and communities that have reimagined segregated spaces in expressive culture as places for congregation. How Racism Takes Place not only exposes the degree to which this white spatial imagining structures our society but also celebrates the black artists and activists who struggle to create a just and decent society.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: