
Former welfare father, ordained Baptist minister, and Princeton Ph.D., Michael Eric Dyson is best known for taking black studies ”to the streets” with his passion for popular culture and his commitment to urban youth. Here he unearths the hidden rules that poison our language, our thinking, and our politics.Dyson reveals the pernicious influence of racial thinking across the broad canvas of American social and cultural life, from the disjunction between how whites and blacks view the world, to the way perceptions of black masculinity thwart black leadership, to the politics of nostalgia that keeps us looking to an imaginary past rather than creating a positive future. Through painful examples drawn from within the black community—sexual conflict in the black church, the myth of the ”head Negro,” relations between black men and women—he depicts our ongoing failure to break free of the rule of race.”In a color-blind society, we can only see black and white,” warns Dyson as he argues for color consciousness informed by history and shaped by hope. provocative and compelling, Race Rules is the most important work to date from the ”hip-hop intellectual” who stands at the forefront of his generation of black public thinkers.
Michael Eric Dyson investigates the pervasive and often invisible mechanisms of racial categorization that continue to dictate social, political, and cultural interactions in the United States. Drawing on his background as a scholar, minister, and public intellectual, Dyson argues that the American obsession with a "color-blind" ideology serves to obscure systemic inequalities rather than resolve them. He posits that a shift toward "color consciousness"—an awareness informed by historical context and directed toward future progress—is necessary to dismantle the racial hierarchies that persist in modern society.
What You Will Find
Experts and readers frequently identify this work as a significant contribution to late-20th-century cultural criticism, noting Dyson's ability to bridge academic theory with accessible, street-level discourse. The text is widely regarded as a foundational exploration of the complexities inherent in American racial identity and the limitations of color-blind rhetoric.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
1996-10-17
Publisher:
Basic Books
ISBN-10:
0201911868
ISBN-13:
9780201911862
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