Cover image for Prejudice Across America.
Prejudice Across America.
Title:
Prejudice Across America.
Author:
Waller, James.
ISBN:
9781604730302
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (223 pages)
Contents:
CONTENTS -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: The Making of "Prejudice Across America" -- 1. The Preparations -- 2. Los Angeles: Taiko Drums, Blues, and the Banana Bungalow -- 3. San Francisco: The Goodness of Uncle Guy -- 4. Chicago: Arvis Tells It Like It Is -- 5. Memphis: A Grief Observed -- 6. New Orleans: An Interlude -- 7. Birmingham: ''Bombingham'' Revisited -- 8. Atlanta: ''Don't Tell Me It's on Peachtree, Again. '' -- 9. Washington, D.C.: The Beginning of a Country and the End of Our Line -- Afterword -- Appendix A: Itinerary of the 1998 Tour -- Appendix B: Bibliographic Essay -- Index.
Abstract:
The experiences of a teacher and his white students on a nationwide trek toward racial understanding. In 1998 James Waller took twenty-one white college students from Washington state on a month-long journey. Prejudice Across America is the record of their interaction with the American Indian, Asian American, African American, Hispanic, and Jewish experiences nationwide. Few books have so directly and humanly captured the moment when whites confront the realities of those living as a minority in America. Waller reports here on this innovative and award-winning trek. In Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Memphis, New Orleans, Birmingham, Atlanta, and Washington, D.C., his students hear both the official story of prejudice and the street story from people living and dealing with racism on a daily basis. Prejudice Across America is as much the journal of these travelers and what they face as it is a sweeping, up-close survey of the nation's racial landscape. The students walk the cheerless halls of a South Side housing project in Chicago, experience the agitated aftermath of the Olympic Games in Atlanta, and attend a briefing with President Clinton's Initiative on Race. All along the way, they hold wide-ranging group discussions and experience the unpredictable adventure of traveling by train, plane, and public transit. Drawing on student journals and on interviews with community leaders and activists throughout the country, Waller paints a compelling and provocative portrait of the nation's prejudice. In addition, Prejudice Across America includes analyses of the obstacles to reconciliation in each of the cities on the tour's itinerary. As they travel, students confront the thorny issues of race in America, face down stereotypical thoughts, prejudicial attitudes and discriminatory behaviors, and uncover more tough questions than easy answers. As

Waller and another group of students prepare for a similar trek in 2001, Prejudice Across America will allow readers to join them in introspection and self-discovery in the urban reality of an America where diversity isn't simply a buzzword, but a way of life. James Waller is a professor of psychology at Whitworth College in Spokane, Washington. He has also published Face to Face: The Changing State of Racism Across America (1998).
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.
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