Publication

1998 - Pantheon Books, New York, New York (State)

Language

English

Word Count

106,750 words, Guess

Page Count

427 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • LibraryThing80467
  • Goodreads1520123

Classifications

  • DDC305.8/00973
  • LCCF215 .H18 1998

Description

Making Whiteness is a profoundly important work that explains how and why whiteness came to be such a crucial, embattled - and distorting - component of twentieth-century American identity. Grace Elizabeth Hale shows how, when faced with the active citizenship of their ex-slaves after the Civil War, white southerners reestablished their dominance through a cultural system based on violence and physical separation. And in analysis of the meaning of segregation for the nation as a whole, she explains how white southerners' creation of modern "whiteness" was, beginning in the 1920s, taken up by the rest of the nation as a way of enforcing a new social hierarchy while at the same time creating the illusion of a national, egalitarian, consumerist democracy.

First Sentence

HOW CAN WE NARRATE the founding moment of emancipation, the achievement at long last by four million people of the ownership of their own mid-nineteenth-century selves?

Excerpt

HOW CAN WE NARRATE the founding moment of emancipation, the achievement at long last by four million people of the ownership of their own mid-nineteenth-century selves?

Subjects

Other Editions

  • Making whiteness: the culture of segregation in the South, 1890-1940Pantheon Books1998-01-01

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