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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is a landmark book on race that is a "must" read., January 12, 1999
By A Customer
The truth is not always pretty or palatable, but as the Bible says, it "shall set you free." That is the basic premise, and promise, of "By the Color of Our Skin: the Illusion of Integration and the Reality of Race," brilliantly written, argued and researched by Leonard Steinhorn and Barbara Diggs-Brown.The 1990s have not exactly been famine years for books on race, and some of them, quite frankly, have an "attitude" and an ideological ax to grind. "By the Color of Our Skin," in contrast, gives us a stark and uncompromisingly fair and honest picture of reality, moving the reader -- with statistics, facts, and cultural and historical analysis -- across America's vast sociological landscape, to the conclusion that for all of the Colin Powells, Oprah Winfreys, Michael Jordans, and Bill Cosbys, we are surely calcifying into two separate Americas -- one black, one white. Politicians, the media and the entertainment industries play and perpetuate a tune of integration-on-its-way-to-being-achieved, and they have "charmed" the American people into thinking that things are ultimately moving in the right direction, that all that is needed now is time. But it is precisely time that is working against us, and unless we -- to borrow a medical phrase -- take some "heroic measures," we will become two countries sharing one land. Admittedly, the authors are not particularly optimistic that Americans will take such "heroic measures." The resistance to affirmative action makes that clear. Indeed, all the signs suggest that Americans have neither the will nor the inclination to make the necessary sacrifices. But then the question is, do we want to become like Belgium, fractured along Flemish and Waloon fault lines, or a Switzerland divided into separate national cantons? Perhaps the most we can hope for is co-existence, the authors say, but clearly Steinhorn and Diggs-Brown prefer to light a candle than curse the darkness. For, as the authors point out, there are models for reasonably successful integration: Shaker Heights, Ohio; the Corning Corporation in New York state; the United States military. But it requires an enormous amount of work, will, dedication, and constant vigiliance to see that the disease of racism and separatism does not gain the upper hand. The U.S. military is wise enough to understand that lives depend on racial harmony within the ranks. We should be wise enough to understand that the life -- the very survival -- of our country may depend on the same thing. "By the Color of Our Skin" cuts to the bone of America's racial dilemma. More than any other book on the subject, it has the potential to change hearts and minds in this country, to bequeath to our children a better, more whole America. This book is the most candid, creative and refreshing treatment of the race question I have ever read. I cannot recommend it too highly.
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