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Race (Paperback)

~ (Author) "My grandmother put all her energy in trying to expose me to all that was possible, both good and bad, in music, art, and literature..." (more)
Key Phrases: poor white people, Martin Luther King, United States, South Side (more...)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The first title from Andre Schiffrin's publishing house is a major, timely book for an election year. In Terkel's ( Hard Times ) well-established manner--he is one of the great interviewers--he encourages a wide range of Americans, black and white, to speak their minds about race with remarkable frankness, as well as about their perceptions of the Washington leadership. The resulting book is infinitely more informative than polls taken on such issues because the subjects are allowed to explore their thoughts, prejudices, hopes and fears. There is almost universal agreement among the blacks and white sympathizers interviewed that life looks darker for blacks now than it did 20 years ago. A strong commitment to civil rights, meaningful affirmative action and poverty programs and a social climate in which overt racism was unacceptable all apparently suffered during the Reagan years. And now the economic hardships that are also partly a legacy of that era are further polarizing American society in ways that are seldom discussed. As South African author Rian Malan tells Terkel, "I think there's been an unhealthy trend in America for a long time not to discuss race. . . . I think airing prejudice could be healthy. . . . Race prejudice is something that thrives in ignorance." But optimism is hard to come by. Black psychologist Kenneth Clark states: "I am not sanguine about any kind of solid decency and justice in the area of race in America. The best we can settle for is appearance." The immediacy with which the interviewees speak about their experiences brings a fine leavening of anecdotes and stories to the mix of opinions, from tales of run-ins with the police ("I don't know one black person who's never had an encounter with cops," says a young middle-class musician) to moments of surprising warmth and understanding, as when a former Klansman finds himself working as a union leader with his arch-enemy, a formidable black woman. The reader comes away with greatly expanded understanding of much recent American social history and a wish that more respondents could display the balance of the well-adjusted mixed couples whose testimonies end the book.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Kirkus Reviews

Focusing on one of the themes of his interview collection The Great Divide (1988), Pulitzer-winner Terkel (``The Good War'', 1984, etc.) elicits from dozens of blacks and whites a kaleidoscope of emotions on how they have been affected by race. The voices of nearly one hundred ordinary (and a few extraordinary) people, largely Chicagoans, are heard, running the gamut from a 26-year-old white construction worker (``I think this city would be a much better place if there wasn't a majority of black people living here'') to a black domestic outraged at the Statue of Liberty centennial (``What are you celebrating? You came here in chains in the bottom of ships and half-dead and beaten''). Raw, reasonable, and every gradation between, the subjects include the mother of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black youth lynched for allegedly whistling at a white woman in 1954; a white federal criminal investigator whose liberalism has been shaken by the crimes she sees in the inner city; psychologist Kenneth B. Clark, bemoaning the past few decades' stalling of black progress; a black street hustler yearning for a job laying carpets; and a Ku Klux Klansman who has renounced racism and embraced his former black foes. Several leitmotifs are sounded--including the black male's plight, Rev. Louis Farrakhan, black sexual myths, crimes, the equity of affirmative action, and continuing racial animosity despite economic injustices suffered by blacks and poor whites alike. For all their differences, the interviewees are in virtually unanimous agreement that the gap between the races has widened during the Reagan-Bush years. Through these vivid, searching voices, Terkel depicts, in all their complexity and humanity, people grappling with dilemmas posed in Andrew Hacker's Two Nations (p. 92). -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Anchor; 1st Anchor Books Ed edition (March 1, 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 038546889X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385468893
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,131,278 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A revealing look at the 'American obsession.', October 14, 2002
By Chris (Washington state, USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
rst a few parahprases from the interviews in this book which was published in 1993:"

Professor Douglas Massey points out that relatively stable jobs such as in factories, steel mills and auto plants have dissapeared in black communities. These jobs have largely dissapeared for this generation. Blacks cannot move to where decent jobs might be because of their difficulty in entering the housing market. A person working in the service economy, say at Macdonalds, full time at minimum wage, can't stay above the poverty line.

Alex Berteau, a partner in a law firm, says that it's tough for him to talk to young successful whites who say that they have nothing to do with the injustices done to African Americans in the past. Berteau says, no, it's not them, it's their fathers, who profited while paying black people subsistence wages so their children to go to Harvard. This young individual says "Don't lay it on my doorstep" yet he is getting all the fruits of it. Berteau, says that this youngster has a college degree but the black man who slaved so his father could get everything cheap is illiterate and can barely speak English. To get rid of Affirmative Action, is to ignore history, he says.

Maggie Holmes, retired domestic worker, refers to a painting at the Chicago art musem in the mid-80's of Chicago's black progressive mayor Harold Washington in a bra and panties and apparently an exhibit consisting of an American flag on the floor which people were invited to walk on. To judge by her comments, it appears the white population ridiculed the anger of blacks at the first, but raised an uproar at the second. She also says that the American flag is just an old rag that dosen't mean anything to her, because white people burned things and wrapped themselves around that flag when Dr. King was marching.

Mike Wrobleski, former police captain in Chicago is interviewed. He got a lot of viscious harrassment from his fellow officers during the 80's because he would not tolerate racist posters and other expressions, many about Mayor Washington, in police stations under his watch. He got one letter which contained a picture of a naked black man and a white woman with her mouth open that said "You nigger-lover. This is what my wife is doing when I'm not at home." Terkel notes that this lout actually meant to say "your wife" instead of "my wife" and Wrobleski comments that there is probably some deep Freudian stuff in that case, the fear of the alleged sexual prowess of black men on which he based his racism.

Fred Hampton, is only refered to once in this book, in the very last interview. Terkel says in a footnote that in 1990 the Chicago city council voted to have a Fred Hampton day but after that sixteen white alderman objected on the grounds that they thought they had voted to honor Dan Hampton the Chicago Bears football player.

Most of these interviews take place with people from Chicago, Terkel's hometown, which has always been pretty volatie racially. Marquette Park is refered to several times early in the book. This was where Dr. King tried to have a march in 1966 but instead got assaulted with rocks several times by rampaging white mobs, whose hatred terrified him. He said that it had surpassed anything he had seen in the South.

Then there are a few like C.P. Ellis and Ann Atwater from Durham North Carolina. Ellis was a poor white klansman who battled the black activist Atwater in the racial strife of Durham in the 60's. Ellis started to lose his enthusisasm for the KKK when he realized that the big politicians and economic elite of Durham who provided funds and expressions of racial solidarity to him and his chapter of the KKK during the nightime were embarassed to associate with a poor white like him during the daytime. He realized that poor whites had a heck of a lot in common with poor blacks. He became close to Atwater and speaks about her in his interviews (one in 1978, the other in 1989) with great emotion. He became a multi-racial union organizer. C.P. Ellis is an example of what Dr. Kenneth Clark of Brown Vs. Board of education fame refers to, in his interiview, about poor whites trying to get feelings of self-worth in this society by stomping on poor blacks below them in the class system.W

ill Campbell, a White Southern preacher says in his interview regarding the origins of the term "redneck. It was from a Edwin Markham poem which refered to the poor white farmer taking a break from his slavery, putting his hands on his hoe and looking on the ground. All the while the scorching sun beats down on the back of his neck. Thus he gets a redneck. Unfortunately, says the reverand, we've equated that with racism.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good, April 14, 2007
Studs Terkel's "Race" is another in a series of books that provides an excellent oral history about subjects that few feel free to talk about. If you like oral history, then you'll love Studs Terkel. Famous for his classic book "Working", he seeks out common "unfamous" Americans and simply asks them to talk about what they think about Race and race relations, in this book. Written in 1990, the book is a little dated, but still holds largely true. There are around 100 interviews in this book. He interviews about an equal amount of Blacks and Whites with some other ethnicities mixed in, and like in all of his books, he interviews about the same number of old and young, men and women, and middle-class and poor. (No mention of anyone's sexuality though.)

Some highlighted stories are from a white former Ku Klux Klan member and a black former civil rights leader are interviewed some two decades later. The Ku Klux Klan member has become a hard-core anti-racist radical who is President of his union which is more than 80% Black. The former civil rights leader has become a conservative republican (though he still believes in limited Affirmative Action). Many of the other stories are interesting because when you put the white point of view and the black point of view right next to each other, there are clearly some huge gaps in understanding each other, and usually the faults and ignorance seem to lie on the white point of view (though some of the interviewed are trying to change their understandings or admit they've changed). There is a lot of frustration on both sides, but at no point do you get an opinion exactly the same as another individual.

I have a belief that you should have 10% theory and 90% action, and lately I've been reading a lot of theory. Books like these are a good antidote to too much theory in your life. I love oral history, because it's straight to the point and doesn't require any detective work by the reader to find out what the author is talking about. Something like the subject of Race, being so linked to how people in the United States relate to each other, you need some straight-forward answers. People too often dance around the issue of race and in order to build a social change movement that brings real improvement in all people's lives; we can't squirt around race anymore than class or gender or sexuality or anything else. Most often, the real battle is the battle for the hearts and minds of people, and to understand what that is exactly. Oral history is important.

In conclusion, Studs Terkel is my favorite non-fiction writer of all time, because his work involves the words of thousands of ordinary people.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Typically outstanding Terkel, July 30, 2000
By Eric V. Moye (New York, by way of Dallas) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Studs Terkel may be the greatest American chronicler of oral history. I recall an introduction to his writing by reading his book "Working" while in college twenty five years ago. I love his ability to tell history by and through the words of those who have lived it.

"Race" is the most difficult topic he has ever chosen. Gunnar Myrdal was correct when he called it the American dilemma. Terkel examines it from not just one perspective or two (or even three). Instead, he has brought together dozens of varying perspectives on the most dividing issue in the Nation. The greatness of this work does not come from the well known names, although there are many: from Louis Farrakhan, Dr. Kenneth Clark, the Mother of Emmett Till and Clarence Page. Also included are those who are unknown (but nonetheless speak to and for legions of other Americans of all races and persuasions).

It is nothing if not thought provoking. The participants come to life in the writing of this excellent work. It will make the reader rethink some of his/her closely held notions, and see a different perspective. Whether any ideas change or not, reading "Race" and thinking about its content it is an exercise in which we should all engage.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A interesting read on so many levels

I was glued to the book because it was able to give me an understanding of my feelings when it comes to the subject matter in this book. Read more
Published 10 months ago by evil-lynn

4.0 out of 5 stars The Other Great Divide
As I have done on other occasions when I am reviewing more than one work by an author I am using some of the same comments, where they are pertinent, here as I did in earlier... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Alfred Johnson

1.0 out of 5 stars NOBODY KNOWS THE TROUBLES i'VE SEEN, NOBODY KNOWS MY SORROWS.
I expected the book would be excellent and interesting as Terkel's writing usually is. But what I discovered was a 60s pity party for blacks and white apologists. Oh! My! Read more
Published 12 months ago by James B. Johnson

5.0 out of 5 stars Candid Oral History
I first encountered Studs Terkel's fascinating oral histories through his book "Working." In "Race," he creates a richly textured study of one of America's great obsessions--and... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Valerie J. Saturen

4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting
Growing up in Detroit in the 40's and 50's I remember the respect we were taught to adults be they black or white. Read more
Published on October 1, 2003 by David A. Spearman

3.0 out of 5 stars My review
Studs Terkel has done some very good things with this book and he clearly is a talented interviewer with a strong grasp of the state of race relations in the US. Read more
Published on June 15, 2003 by Christopher Braden

4.0 out of 5 stars Race matters
The author interview both black and whites, in Chicago in the early 90's. The people interviewed answered questions about race issues. Read more
Published on April 22, 2002 by "July Lady"

2.0 out of 5 stars Far from Terkel's best
Studs Terkel applies his oral narrative to the great American racial divide. The interviews are often interesting, revealing, and at times jaded by misconceptions or fear. Read more
Published on February 10, 2002 by K.A.Goldberg

5.0 out of 5 stars great book
i've followed Studs Terkel.everytime he is on tv being interviewed i listen because he is always on point about Race in America.this book is solid in his findings. Read more
Published on January 28, 2000 by mistermaxxx@yahoo.com

5.0 out of 5 stars One of Terkel's best writings!
This book is great. Studs is a great author and went around America asking people about their experiences with racism. Read more
Published on March 31, 1999 by Michael Cooper

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