What Racists Believe
Race Relations in South Africa and the United States
- Gerhard Schutte - University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, WI
Volume:
8
December 1994 | 400 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
In many democratic societies, racial inequality persists despite its legal abolition. At the point of entering a democratic era, South Africa is dismantling its legally structured system of inequality. However, the structures of consciousness that gave rise to, and nurtured a system of, white privilege and predominance are tenacious and enduring. In What Racists Believe, Gerhard Schutte examines a wide spectrum of evidence, showing how the in-group consciousness of whites is reproduced and illustrating the processes under which it is maintained. He explains how and why people believe in racial inequality and how they transmit these beliefs to others. The ideology of white solidarity, its perpetuation, and its breakdown is also analyzed. In the author's analysis, he separates different strands of racism: rural from urban, and moderate from militant. A final chapter compares racial attitudes in contemporary America and South America.
Students, scholars, and anyone interested in race relations, sociology, anthropology, political science, and African studies will surely appreciate the fascinating study found in What Racists Believe.
Introduction
Perspective
The Emergence of the Past
The Construction of the Present
Public Discourse and the Reconstruction of South Africa I
Public Discourse and the Reconstruction of South Africa II
The World of Whites
Whites in the Countryside
Whites in Town I
Whites in Town II
Race and Discourse
Whites in American Race Relations