Racism
From Slavery to Advanced Capitalism
- Carter A. Wilson - Northern Michigan University, USA, University of Toledo, USA
Volume:
17
August 1996 | 288 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
This volume in the Sage Series on Race and Ethnic Relations seeks to explain the phenomenon of racism throughout history by drawing on and integrating the massive literature on racism coming out of the economic, political, and cultural realms. In so doing, author Carter A. Wilson tackles four major goals: first, to help resolve the major debates surrounding racism; second, to demystify racism; third, to provide understanding of how racism has been sustained in various historical eras; and finally, to discuss how racism takes on different forms in various stages of history.
This eye-opening volume sheds new light on racism and will be vital to students and professionals in race and ethnic studies, sociology, political science, economics, history, American studies and anthropology.
John H Stanfield II
Series Editor's Introduction
Introduction
Theoretical Reflections
The Model
The Historical Origins of Racism
The Origins and Maintenance of Slavery and Dominative Racism in North America
Debt Peonage and Dominative Aversive Racism (1865-1965)
Industrial Capitalism and Aversive Racism
Advanced Capitalism and Meta-Racism (1970 to the Present)