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The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege
 
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The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege (Paperback)

by Robert Jensen (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege + White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son + Understanding White Privilege:  Creating Pathways to Authentic Relationships Across Race (Teaching/Learning Social Justice)
Price For All Three: $44.52

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Editorial Reviews

Review
" . . . a good beginning primer by a white person about confronting racism within and without. . . " - Amanda Davidson -- Modern Times Bookstore Newsletter, San Francisco, January 2006

" . . . concise and thought-provoking book . . . " -- Kel Munger -- Sacramento News and Review

Product Description

In The Souls of Black Folks, W.E.B. DuBois wrote that the question whites wanted to ask him was: "How does it feel to be a problem?" In The Heart of Whiteness, Robert Jensen writes that it is time for white people in America to self-consciously reverse the direction of that question and to fully acknowledge that in the racial arena, they are the problem.

While some whites would like to think that we have reached "the end of racism" in the United States, and others would like to celebrate diversity but are oblivious to the political, economic, and social consequences of a nation-and their sense of self-founded on a system of white supremacy, Jensen proposes a different approach. He sets his sights not only on the racism that can't be hidden, but also on the liberal platitudes that sometimes conceal the depths of that racism in "polite society."

The Heart of Whiteness offers an honest and rigorous exploration of what Jensen refers to as the depraved nature of whiteness in the United States. Mixing personal experience with data and theory, he faces down the difficult realities of -racism and white privilege. He argues that any system that denies non-whites their full humanity also keeps whites from fully accessing their own.

This book is both a cautionary tale for those who believe that they have transcended racism, and also an expression of the hope for genuine transcendence. When white people fully understand and accept the painful reality that they are indeed "the problem," it should lead toward serious attempts to change one's own life and join with others to change society.

Robert Jensen is the author of Citizens of the Empire. He is a professor of media ethics and journalism at The University of Texas at Austin.



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3.3 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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144 of 191 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What Price Privilege?, October 11, 2005
Review of The Heart of Whiteness

For those who choose to take the trip, Professor Jensen has charted a course, in plain English, and with few pretensions, to fuller understanding of the depth of the scars that American racism has left on our humanity. It has infected our individual and collective psyches with a disease that is difficult to overcome: the disease of color prejudice, white privilege, white supremacy, white superiority, and white racism.

In the same vein as that of Lillian Smith's "Killing the Dream;" or Tim Wise's "White Like Me;" or indeed with the same skill and moving passion as the F. H. Griffith classic, "Black Like Me," professor Jensen has used his own life experience, and his considerable intellectual skills to shake not just the white conscience, but the conscience of America. And while he cannot be blamed for not solving all the problems he raised, we must all be grateful to him for having the courage to raise them, and for doing so in such a clear-minded, passionate and committed manner.

In this short volume, the University of Texas at Austin Professor, Robert Jensen, has demonstrated that he has acquired the necessary self-knowledge (the escape velocity needed to propel himself beyond the orbit of "naïve white supremacy" into the orbit of "fully self-conscious white supremacy") to break away from the comforts of white privilege. This is an important and necessary, but as he so eloquently noted, an insufficient step on the road to overcoming the disease of white privilege, and its larger manifestation, American style white racism.

Jensen has let the cat out of the bag: White humanity is just short of a fraud built on the quicksand of propped up privileges, unfair advantages, unjust prerogatives, structural injustices, four-century-old myths, four centuries of violence and genocide, and lies, all insulated and protected by a system of soft tyranny and spatial Apartheid. In short, if one understands Jensen correctly, America has sacrificed all of the little humanity it has, on the altar of skin color superiority.

As Jensen has discovered, in this his much-needed second thrust -- re-entering the old orbit of white supremacy armed with self-knowledge -- is a much trickier step than being a content, "naïve white supremacist." For, as the author has discovered, the invisible power of systemic racial hegemony is the ultimate goal, and the real name of the game of white supremacy.

Jensen makes clear a truism seldom recognized: that American racism is no longer personal. It no longer matters how many committed anti-racists we can summon to a given cause; or who hates or does not hate blacks; or how many skinheads roam the streets, the anti-racists cannot acquire (nor will they ever constitute) a critical mass in American society.

The consolidation and preservation of white privilege through systemic racist power is self-defining, self-promoting, and now all but a self-regulating and self-sustaining process. There is no longer a need to consolidate white privilege, for there can be no better consolidation than having it built in to all the structures of American power. Destroying white privilege, on the other hand, represents a "clear and present danger" to American Society as we know it. Taking Jensen's arguments to their logical conclusions, white identity, the very basis of white self-esteem, and white humanity are all built on the sand castle of exaggerated heroics, violence and color myths -- enforced meanings that favor puffed up interpretations of white history, and the de-valuing and denigration of blacks and other non-white peoples contributions.

As is implicit in this brief but deeply moving confessional, if one looks deeply enough, one will discover that systemic racism transcends and thus resists all attempts at re-adjustments designed to overcome its negative aspects. It has evolved in such a manner that it now can be seen to operate on autopilot: The laws of American social physics and of American racist power mechanics are simple and virtually immutable. They dictate that there can be no absolute black progress relative to whites; that is, that the racist system must remain in a virtual steady-state: Black progress must ALWAYS be compensated for with equal and offsetting amounts of white progress, otherwise whites become agitated and uncomfortable.

It is consider bad sport to attempt to close the absolute distance between the races -- either socially, economically, or politically. Power is the name of the game. As Jensen makes clear, it hardly matters any more what individuals on either side of the racial divide do: The script of the drama has been written, signed, and sealed through the interlocking mechanisms of racist power: lockstep, we all have learned to play out to the last letter, our respective ascribed roles. No deviations are allowed.

To step outside the racist norm as Dr. Jensen has done, is to be considered a "race traitor," and to be brutally jerked back in line and reminded that America's benign and soft racist totalitarianism is neither benign, nor soft. And, in the end, although everything is designed to look different on the surface, taking on different textures and colors, depending on the angle, the brutal fact remains that all power alignments are fixed, immutable and must stay exactly the same -- consolidated under the insulated and ever-protective umbrella of white supremacist hegemony.

Put yet another way, in the end, and at a much deeper level, all moves on the American chessboard have been pre-determined to promote, enable, and consolidate the "ways of white power," and the "ways of white supremacy." Whether it be of the "naïve" or of the "profoundly self-conscious" white supremacist sort that Professor Jensen exhibits, is really of little or no consequence.

As Jensen alludes to himself: by making a virtue out of emerging demographic and moral necessity, the white supremacists have used their favorite unconscious (conscious) tactic: that of redefining and renaming racial discrepancies - this time as multiculturalism and racial and cultural diversity -- and realigning minority interests so that they look much like the chauvinistic white supremacist imperatives they are allowed to mimic.

Once meaning has been drained, redefined, refilled and then realigned, white supremacy is then put firmly back on track; the challenge has been averted, successfully squashed: everything can then be returned to normal but with a different cosmetic look, made to look different (even positive) while at the same time remaining exactly the same. This "co-optation through redefinition and re-incorporation" is the newest systemic way of deflecting all new challenges to racist hegemony.

No matter what the moves are on the American chessboard, white supremacy remains the same old Black Hole that it always has been: a closed insular mean-spirited, evil, structurally violent system from which nothing enters or escapes that does not get altered to promote, consolidate, or enable "the ways of racism." In the end, we are all Condoleeza Rices and Clarence Thomas': closet white supremacists, pretending that we do not know how we are being used to advance the evils of a bankrupt system.

Jensen makes clear that racism, as expressed through the insular world of white privilege, is the gravity that holds the whole stinking system of white supremacy together. The idea that there may yet be an anti-racist world "out there" somewhere where whites will someday voluntarily give up their power and privileges is fanciful and a highly theoretical notion that may in the end be just another illusion, or mirage (like real multiculturalism is).

No one has yet seen, inhabited, or can even describe the steps needed to get to such a world. And while Professor Jensen has made a heroic effort to push us out of our comfort zones -- to the frontiers of a new kind of non-racist thinking and understanding -- in the end even he admits that this will not crack the nut at the center of this peculiar American disease. Even self-conscious white supremacy is perhaps too little, too late. He of course cannot be blamed for this.

What then to do?

Even though everyone seems to understand that systemic problems cannot be solved at non-systemic levels of analysis -- that is, beneath the system as a whole -- they nevertheless seem more comfortable attacking problems of racism at these lower inherently ineffectual levels (at the community and interpersonal levels, for instance) rather than at the national level. I think this is a strategic as well as a systemic mistake.

If we stopped only for a moment to think, we would realize that if any of the laws we have on the books regarding racism were ever to be enforced to the letter, without deviation, racism in America would soon wither away. And, there would be no need to have to re-enact the same ineffectual laws over and over again. "Paper or legal equality" does not work because it is not worth the paper it is written on, and that includes the U.S. Constitution. The failure to enforce a law, over time makes it a "dead letter," an inert symbolic fraud, like the flawed white humanity that has been used to underwrite it.

When will whites begin to understand, that it is not just a "lack of progress" to fail to enforce the Constitution, it is a sharp stab in the heart of American humanity; it renders the Constitution a "dead letter," a paper fraud.

Thus, the first step we need to take is to plug the holes between democratic theory and everyday American practice; between our stated ideals, which sit on pedestals to be lauded as they collect dust, and our everyday American practice. If disincentives were built-in to discourage this kind of leakage, we could solve the problems of racism over night. No need for Affirmative Action or grand theorizing or any other special programs. The Constitution either has what is needed, and thus embodies the meaning it was intended to have; or it has been commandeered by racists for a different meaning, and for entirely different purposes. It cannot be both; whites cannot have their cake and eat it too.

When black people have confidence that the playing field is fair, they come out of their shell of disgrace and self-destructive behavior to excel. In fact, there is no evidence to the contrary. Likewise, when whites see fairness over the horizon, they begin, almost instinctively and always unconsciously, to back up like crabs looking for a place to hide, ways to cut corners; in search of angles to play and advantages, privileges, prerogatives, and offsets to use to give themselves an edge. Just as blacks seem to thrive in environments of fairness, whites seem to fear them.

Enforcing laws TO THE TEE is a simple systemic ways of building the proper incentives into the system that promote and counteract these inherent tendencies.

Professor Jensen sits at the top of my "must read" list. Everything he writes is timely, incisive and worth at least five stars.
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35 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great starting point, January 28, 2006
By Animeg (Atlanta) - See all my reviews
This book is a good starting primer for those who are unfamiliar with white privilege. I especially like how the book is footnoted, so you can immediately look at his sources, and also how he suggests further reading. A must for every white person.
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27 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars People react because it's true!, September 12, 2006
By Truth Speaker "zoezoe" (St. Louis, MO United States) - See all my reviews
Having read the book, and now reading the negative comments, it is clear to me that this book strikes a cord, and those who are most outraged are those who are afraid of losing the power and privilege their race affords them. Their reaction is all the more reason you should read this book. I say this as a college educated white woman. The analysis is in depth and historically spot-on. Anyone who wants to understand the predicament we, as a society, find ourselves in - in terms of race relations and class stratification - should read Jensen's book.

Of course, be prepared to go on a personal, as well as intellectual journey, because if you read this book with your heart open, you will have to face the truth about how you (we all) have internalized racism. That's not a bad thing. If you want to change the world, the best thing you can do is to first change yourself. I suspect the reviewers who are reacting the most are those who are afraid of what they will find on their personal journey. Thank you to Jensen for lighting the way for those of us who are willing to be honest and do the self-reflection necessary to deal with these issues.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Good introduction to White Privilege, but not very detailed/in depth
This book is a brief wake up call to whites, asking them to confront their own privilege. It's honest and to the point, but does not provide too much analysis (it's less than 100... Read more
Published 7 days ago by Ioana Stoica

4.0 out of 5 stars Confronting the Truth
A very thoughtful, insightful, honest, and disturbing book about the heart of racism; the oppression and injustice of white privilege and the need for whites to understand these... Read more
Published 27 days ago by D. Fenrick

5.0 out of 5 stars Imprescindible
Este libro expone los principios básicos de la supremacía blanca que invade todos los aspectos de la sociedad de los estados unidos. Lo recomiendo para todo el mundo.
Published 7 months ago by B. Bravo

1.0 out of 5 stars When you remove genetics as a reason for differences....
in such things as overall intelligence and progression of a group of people based on race then you still are left with having to explain why there are differences. Read more
Published 16 months ago by brazen999

4.0 out of 5 stars Thought-provoking & well worth reading
A quite good book. I found some of his terminology rather off-putting on first read ("white supremacy"), and his perspective is obvously colored by his upbringing in a very... Read more
Published 18 months ago by California Quaker

5.0 out of 5 stars The truth hurts.
Very well written observation from one who has experienced white privilege firsthand. For all the negative reviews, I would say that the truth hurts them to admit that everything... Read more
Published 18 months ago by MLisa

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Good Exploration of Racism
The author does a very good job of bringing to the attention of the reader one of the major sources of racism: white privilege. Read more
Published on July 5, 2007 by Critic

3.0 out of 5 stars Questions for those who've read the book
I acknowledge that I haven't read this (hence the neutral three stars). I just learned of Jensen's existence because of a public lecture he was giving titled "The Skin I'm In: On... Read more
Published on January 23, 2007 by Paul

4.0 out of 5 stars The Heart of Whiteness
It's predictably laughable to see the self-righteous negative reviews of a work, though not perfect, nevertheless is courageous. Read more
Published on January 13, 2007 by M.C. San Francisco

1.0 out of 5 stars Conspiratorial and Ludicrous
The author speaks of incredible global structures based on "white privilege" and thus reveals his work as complete and total medicine showmanship. Read more
Published on January 9, 2007 by Diversity Personchild

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