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Author - John H. Mcwhorter ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Hardcover Book was reviewed on 11-Dec-2008. Search ISBN:B000062UJ1 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America Reference Book. Classifications : Subjects Arts & Photography Biographies & Memoirs Business & Investing Children's Books Comics & Graphic Novels Computers & Internet Cooking, Food & Wine Entertainment Gay & Lesbian Health, Mind & Bod . Click the following link to view the cover of Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America. Related topics: Subjects. Arts & Photography. Children´s Books. Entertainment. Gay & Lesbian. Health, Mind & Body. History. Home & Garden. Law. Medicine. requestid: e336e26c-abc5-4117-8eec-74c5850911c5requestprocessingtime: 0.0659010000000000 salesrank: 1720925 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 100940110600 1) Hardcover Book Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America by . Like other readers, I found John´s writing style to be a bit challenging at times. I can appreciate the necessity of long sentences with embedded clauses, parentheticals, and asides when it comes to complex, logical arguments. But I felt at times that John was writing for an academic reader or letting the linguist in him get carried away with love of syntacital possibilities for their own sake!
2) Hardcover Book Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America by . Was advertised as a new book and was, indeed, a new, unread book. Thank you.¤ 3) Hardcover Book Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America by . A controversial book that raises questions about race which may be taboo, yet still relevant. This book can be a bit wordy at times, but it is an interesting subject matter, and I think it is worthy of a read.¤ 4) Hardcover Book Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America by . Being African American definitely has it´s pros and cons. In establishing where we are at and where we want to go, we often get lost. The media often portrays the black man as violent, inarticulate, promiscuous, and uneducated, and these things are often true but does not plague the black race in it´s entirety. There are many highly driven, highly intellectual black men and women whose primary focus is not to buy the most expensive "bling", or the nicest car, but to expand in themselves a greater knowing and a greater being. We are often conditioned to believe we are inferior to other races though it is not outwardly displayed. Negative feelings for fellow brothers and sisters, negative self images, and anti-black, or light vs. dark manifest and grow with time and this becomes a rather large part of the destruction that has been occurring for many many years.
5) Hardcover Book Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America by . Too often McWhorter does what many blacks accuse whites of doing--he draws a conclusion from any negative encounter he has experienced with another black person and assumes it is the norm. Bad thinking.¤ 6) Hardcover Book Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America by . Berkeley linguistics professor John McWhorter, born at the dawn of the post-Civil Rights era, spent years trying to make sense of this question. Now he dares to say the unsayable: racism´s ugliest legacy is the disease of defeatism that has infected black America. Losing the Race explores the three main components of this cultural virus: the cults of victimology, separatism, and antiintellectualism that are making blacks their own worst enemies in the struggle for success. More angry than Stephen Carter, more pragmatic and compassionate than Shelby Steele, more forward-looking than Stanley Crouch, McWhorter represents an original and provocative point of view. With Losing the Race, a bold new voice rises among black intellectuals. ¤7) Hardcover Book Losing the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America by . For the past two decades, an academic cottage industry has developed to analyze--and some would say overemphasize--the social and educational problems of African Americans. Such writers as Dinesh D´Souza, Shelby Steele, Armstrong Williams, and Ken Hamblin have all contributed in this area; now add to that list John McWhorter, a Berkeley linguistics professor and the author of Word on the Street, an examination of Ebonics and Black English. The basic idea he presents in this occasionally insightful if flawed book is that African Americans are not advancing socially as a result of victimology, separatism, and anti-intellectualism. According to the author, victimology "has become a keystone of cultural blackness to treat victimhood not as a problem to be solved but as an identity to be nurtured," while "separatism encourages black Americans to conceive of black people as an unofficial sovereign entity, within which the rules other Americans are expected to follow are suspended out of a belief that our victimhood renders us morally exempt from them." Anti-intellectualism is a belief that "school is a ´white´ endeavor." McWhorter suggests that only blacks embrace such opinions, placing most of the blame on them while underemphasizing the institutional racism that facilitates such views. Needless to say, McWhorter has no love for the likes of Al Sharpton, Hazel Carby, June Jordan, or Patricia Williams and their ilk. His chapter on Ebonics, his specialty, is the most nuanced, though certainly not the final word on the matter. And though some readers will be turned off by his use of tired anti-affirmative-action, right-wing clichés, anyone interested in the education of African Americans in the post civil rights era will find Losing the Race a worthy read. --Eugene Holley Jr.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 8-Jan-2009, , 5X0-041-J1B-5SB-LMB-V0B-8
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