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The Invention of the White Race, Volume 1: Racial Oppression and Social Control Paperback – November 20, 2012
by
Theodore W. Allen
(Author),
Jeffrey B. Perry
(Introduction)
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Jeffrey B. Perry
(Introduction)
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Book 1 of 2: The Invention of the White Race
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Print length372 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherVerso
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Publication dateNovember 20, 2012
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Dimensions5.98 x 0.99 x 9.26 inches
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ISBN-101844677699
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ISBN-13978-1844677696
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A monumental study of the birth of racism in the American South which makes truly new and convincing points about one of the most critical problems in US history ... a highly original and seminal work.”
—David Roediger
“A powerful and polemical study.”
—Times Literary Supplement
“In a masterful two-volume work, Theodore Allen transforms the reader’s understanding of race and racial oppression from what mainstream history often portrays as an unfortunate sideshow in U.S. history to a central feature in the construction of U.S. (and indeed global) capitalism … more than a look at history; it is a foundation for a path toward social justice.”
—Bill Fletcher Jr., coauthor of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path Toward Social Justice
“A must read for all social justice activists, teachers, and scholars.”
—Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of Red Dirt: Growing Up Okie
“Decades before people made careers ‘undoing racism,’ Ted Allen was working on this trailblazing study, which has become required reading.”
—Noel Ignatiev, coeditor of Race Traitor, author of How the Irish Became White
“A real tour de force, a welcome return to empiricism in the subfield of race studies, and a timely reintroduction of class into the discourse on American exceptionalism.”
—Times Higher Education Supplement
“As magisterial and comprehensive as the day it was first published, Theodore Allen’s The Invention of the White Race continues to set the intellectual, analytical and rhetorical standard when it comes to understanding the real roots of white supremacy, its intrinsic connection to the class system, and the way in which persons committed to justice and equity might move society to a different reality.”
—Tim Wise, author of White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son
“One of the most important books of U.S. history ever written. It illuminates the origins of the largest single obstacle to progressive change and working-class power in the U.S.: racism and white supremacy.”
—Joe Berry, author of Reclaiming the Ivory Tower
“As organizers of workers, we cannot effectively counter the depth of white racism in the U.S. if we don’t understand its origin and mechanisms. Ted has figured something out that can guide our work—it’s groundbreaking and it’s eye-opening.”
—Gene Bruskin, US Labor Against the War
“An intriguing book that will be cited in all future discussions about the origins of racism and slavery in America.”
—Labor Studies Journal
“A must read for educators, scholars and social change activists—now more than ever! Ted Allen’s writings illuminate the centrality of how white supremacy continues to work in maintaining a powerless American working class.”
—Tami Gold, director of RFK in the Land of Apartheid and My Country Occupied in Slave Plantation Societies
“Few books are capable of carrying the profound weight of being deemed to be a classic—this is surely one. Indeed, if one has to read one book to provide a foundation for understanding the contemporary US—read this one.”
—Gerald Horne, author of Negro Comrades of the Crown
“A richly researched and highly suggestive analysis ... Indispensable for readers interested in the disposition of power in Ireland, in the genesis of racial oppression in the U.S., or in the fluidity of ‘race’ and the historic vicissitudes of ‘whiteness.’”
—Choice
“The Invention of the White Race’s contributions to the debates on notions of a ‘white race’ are unquestionable and its relevance not simply for scholars of American history but for those interested in notions of race and class in any historical and geographical setting is beyond doubt.”
—Labour History Review
“Theodore W. Allen has enlisted me as a devoted reader.”
—Metro Times Literary Quarterly
“The most important book on the origin of racism in what was to become the United States—and more important now perhaps than when it was first released in the mid nineties.”
—Gregory Meyerson, coeditor of Cultural Logic
“This ‘modern classic’ presents an essential reconstruction of concepts necessary to any understanding of the Western heritage in the context of World history.”
—Wilson J. Moses, author of The Golden Age of Black Nationalism
“Truly original, and worthy of renewed engagement.”
—Bruce Nelson, author of Irish Nationalists and the Making of the Irish Race
“The Invention of the White Race is an important work for its meticulously researched materials and its insights into colonial history. Its themes and perspectives should be made available to all scholars ... A classic without which no future American history will be written.”
—Audrey Smedley, author of Race in North America: Origin and Evolution of a Worldview
“The most comprehensive and meticulously documented presentation of the historical, or as he calls it, ‘sociogenic’ theory of racial oppression.”
—Freedom Road Magazine
“In Volume One of The Invention of the White Race: Racial Oppression and Social Control, Theodore W. Allen painstakingly sets out the historical precedents, the comparative case studies, the means to dissect threadbare explanations of contemporary racism, and then provides us with nimble heuristic devices to disentangle the snarled derivatives of the white supremacy ideology we face today.”
—Edward H. Peeples, Ph.D., Associate Professor Emeritus at Virginia Commonwealth University, civil rights activist, and author of Twentieth Century Scalawag: A White Southerner’s Journey through Segregation to Human Rights Activism
“[The Invention of the White Race] will change your life and outlook forever. You simply can’t understand America and who we are without this book”
—Carl Davidson, author of New Paths to Socialism
“If one wants to understand the current, often contradictory, system of racial oppression in the United States—and its historical origins—there is only one place to start: Theodore Allen’s brilliant, illuminating, The Invention of the White Race.”
—Michael Goldfield, author of The Color of Politics: Race and the Mainsprings of American Politics
“Immigration historians should be particularly interested in Allen’s analysis of how the Irish, victims of racial oppression at home, learned that they were ‘white’ once they crossed the Atlantic and became … supporters of a system of racial oppression in the United States.”
—Journal of American Ethnic History
“Allen has produced a two-volume tour de force that situates the development of racism, white supremacy, and racial identities in context of the sixteenth and seventeenth century British conquest of Ireland, the Atlantic slave trade, the rise of chattel bond-servitude in the Caribbean and English-speaking North America, and the destruction of Native American societies.”
—Charles L. Lumpkins, author of American Pogrom: The East St. Louis Race Riot and Black Politics
“Anyone who wants to understand the peculiar state of working class organizing in the USA ... needs to study and learn from the insights provided by the work of … Allen.”
—George N. Schmidt, editor of Substance News
“Allen’s work adds a level of detail often overlooked. He incorporates ‘white’ people into the discussion, and not just as proponents and perpetrators of slavery. He shows how most … whites perpetuated their own subordination by rejecting alliances with people of color.”
—Kim Scipes, Logos
“This outstanding, insightful original work with profound implications for the fractured working class protest tradition of the United States could not be more timely as working people throughout the world are shamelessly robbed and dispossessed by the financial manipulations of our Wall Street titans still wielding their poison bait of white skin privilege.”
—Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, author of Social Control in Slave Plantation Societies
“Essential reading for all students of race and power in America. This path-breaking research reframes and cuts across the disciplines of history, sociology and politics, shedding a dynamic new light on the important and often hidden phenomenon of race in America’s cultural evolution.”
—Joseph Wilson, co-author Race and Labor Matters in the New US Economy
“One of the great contributions of Allen’s study is a complete debunking of the myth that race and skin color are the same thing.”
—Jonathan Scott, author of Socialist Joy in the Writings of Langston Hughes
“The transition from being poor, dispossessed, Catholic and oppressed when in Ireland, to fully ordained members of the ‘white race’ when in America, with all the privileges, rights and immunities appertaining thereto, illustrates the sociological relativity of notions of race ... [and] confirms Allen’s preference for a ‘sociogenic’ understanding of racial oppression rooted in sociological processes, rather than ‘phylogenic’ or genetic interpretations.”
—Ethnic & Racial Studies
“Allen … an independent scholar … has pursued an idea across the frontier of conventional specializations, supported in his labours by a belief that to determine the origin of white racism will contribute to its eradication. It is difficult to envisage such a work being produced in the wasteland of contemporary academic life.”
—Ecumene
“Allen’s use of the Irish example lends support to the argument that race is a social construction. A strength of Allen’s book is his effort to view race apart from biology, to see racial categories as ever-changing social conventions and not as immutable classifications fixed in nature or the human psyche.”
—Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
“Allen is concerned here with … a comparative analysis of racial oppression in Ireland and in the United States … and the shift in identity among Irish immigrant Catholics, who moved from a group oppressed on racial grounds in Ireland to one defined as ‘white’ in the United States …What pulls the entire discussion together is the notion of ‘Social Control.’ Allen argues that racial oppression (racial social control) is one of various mechanisms a ruling elite can utilize to protect its position in society.”
—Contemporary Sociology
“Allen champions the superiority of socioeconomic over psychocultural approaches to the study of race and slavery … [and] notes, “only by ‘understanding what was peculiar about the Peculiar Institution can one know what is exceptionable about ‘American Exceptionalism.”
—Journal of American History
“Allen sees race as an invention—and he knows who invented it. Racial slavery was the creation of colonial power (or a ruling class, or the bourgeoisie), and what was done in North America was analogous to what was done in Ireland. So the struggle against capitalism and the struggle against race are part of the same campaign.”
—Tribune (London)
“Allen’s two volume masterpiece—The Invention of the White Race—is vital ammunition for those of us engaged in Revolutionary Change because his work helps to expose the current myth of a post-racial US society/world and reveal the underbelly of a dying capitalism’s hyper-racial world of violence, terror and human and natural exploitation.”
—S.E. Anderson, author of The Black Holocaust for Beginners
“If you hope to understand the tangled history of race and class, The Invention of the White Race has to be on your reading list.”
—Will Shetterly, author of Dogland
“The notion of ‘privilege’ is ubiquitous amongst radicals today. But few of them understand its origins in Ted Allen’s conception of ‘white privilege,’ and fewer still have read and wrestled with his masterwork The Invention of the White Race. Allen’s provocative thesis—that the ‘white race’ was a category constructed to suppress class conflict—asks deep and troubling questions about the foundation of the United States and the intersection of race and class, while openly challenging the Left’s fundamental assumptions about social change in this country.”
—Spencer Sunshine, assistant editor of Monthly Review
—David Roediger
“A powerful and polemical study.”
—Times Literary Supplement
“In a masterful two-volume work, Theodore Allen transforms the reader’s understanding of race and racial oppression from what mainstream history often portrays as an unfortunate sideshow in U.S. history to a central feature in the construction of U.S. (and indeed global) capitalism … more than a look at history; it is a foundation for a path toward social justice.”
—Bill Fletcher Jr., coauthor of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path Toward Social Justice
“A must read for all social justice activists, teachers, and scholars.”
—Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of Red Dirt: Growing Up Okie
“Decades before people made careers ‘undoing racism,’ Ted Allen was working on this trailblazing study, which has become required reading.”
—Noel Ignatiev, coeditor of Race Traitor, author of How the Irish Became White
“A real tour de force, a welcome return to empiricism in the subfield of race studies, and a timely reintroduction of class into the discourse on American exceptionalism.”
—Times Higher Education Supplement
“As magisterial and comprehensive as the day it was first published, Theodore Allen’s The Invention of the White Race continues to set the intellectual, analytical and rhetorical standard when it comes to understanding the real roots of white supremacy, its intrinsic connection to the class system, and the way in which persons committed to justice and equity might move society to a different reality.”
—Tim Wise, author of White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son
“One of the most important books of U.S. history ever written. It illuminates the origins of the largest single obstacle to progressive change and working-class power in the U.S.: racism and white supremacy.”
—Joe Berry, author of Reclaiming the Ivory Tower
“As organizers of workers, we cannot effectively counter the depth of white racism in the U.S. if we don’t understand its origin and mechanisms. Ted has figured something out that can guide our work—it’s groundbreaking and it’s eye-opening.”
—Gene Bruskin, US Labor Against the War
“An intriguing book that will be cited in all future discussions about the origins of racism and slavery in America.”
—Labor Studies Journal
“A must read for educators, scholars and social change activists—now more than ever! Ted Allen’s writings illuminate the centrality of how white supremacy continues to work in maintaining a powerless American working class.”
—Tami Gold, director of RFK in the Land of Apartheid and My Country Occupied in Slave Plantation Societies
“Few books are capable of carrying the profound weight of being deemed to be a classic—this is surely one. Indeed, if one has to read one book to provide a foundation for understanding the contemporary US—read this one.”
—Gerald Horne, author of Negro Comrades of the Crown
“A richly researched and highly suggestive analysis ... Indispensable for readers interested in the disposition of power in Ireland, in the genesis of racial oppression in the U.S., or in the fluidity of ‘race’ and the historic vicissitudes of ‘whiteness.’”
—Choice
“The Invention of the White Race’s contributions to the debates on notions of a ‘white race’ are unquestionable and its relevance not simply for scholars of American history but for those interested in notions of race and class in any historical and geographical setting is beyond doubt.”
—Labour History Review
“Theodore W. Allen has enlisted me as a devoted reader.”
—Metro Times Literary Quarterly
“The most important book on the origin of racism in what was to become the United States—and more important now perhaps than when it was first released in the mid nineties.”
—Gregory Meyerson, coeditor of Cultural Logic
“This ‘modern classic’ presents an essential reconstruction of concepts necessary to any understanding of the Western heritage in the context of World history.”
—Wilson J. Moses, author of The Golden Age of Black Nationalism
“Truly original, and worthy of renewed engagement.”
—Bruce Nelson, author of Irish Nationalists and the Making of the Irish Race
“The Invention of the White Race is an important work for its meticulously researched materials and its insights into colonial history. Its themes and perspectives should be made available to all scholars ... A classic without which no future American history will be written.”
—Audrey Smedley, author of Race in North America: Origin and Evolution of a Worldview
“The most comprehensive and meticulously documented presentation of the historical, or as he calls it, ‘sociogenic’ theory of racial oppression.”
—Freedom Road Magazine
“In Volume One of The Invention of the White Race: Racial Oppression and Social Control, Theodore W. Allen painstakingly sets out the historical precedents, the comparative case studies, the means to dissect threadbare explanations of contemporary racism, and then provides us with nimble heuristic devices to disentangle the snarled derivatives of the white supremacy ideology we face today.”
—Edward H. Peeples, Ph.D., Associate Professor Emeritus at Virginia Commonwealth University, civil rights activist, and author of Twentieth Century Scalawag: A White Southerner’s Journey through Segregation to Human Rights Activism
“[The Invention of the White Race] will change your life and outlook forever. You simply can’t understand America and who we are without this book”
—Carl Davidson, author of New Paths to Socialism
“If one wants to understand the current, often contradictory, system of racial oppression in the United States—and its historical origins—there is only one place to start: Theodore Allen’s brilliant, illuminating, The Invention of the White Race.”
—Michael Goldfield, author of The Color of Politics: Race and the Mainsprings of American Politics
“Immigration historians should be particularly interested in Allen’s analysis of how the Irish, victims of racial oppression at home, learned that they were ‘white’ once they crossed the Atlantic and became … supporters of a system of racial oppression in the United States.”
—Journal of American Ethnic History
“Allen has produced a two-volume tour de force that situates the development of racism, white supremacy, and racial identities in context of the sixteenth and seventeenth century British conquest of Ireland, the Atlantic slave trade, the rise of chattel bond-servitude in the Caribbean and English-speaking North America, and the destruction of Native American societies.”
—Charles L. Lumpkins, author of American Pogrom: The East St. Louis Race Riot and Black Politics
“Anyone who wants to understand the peculiar state of working class organizing in the USA ... needs to study and learn from the insights provided by the work of … Allen.”
—George N. Schmidt, editor of Substance News
“Allen’s work adds a level of detail often overlooked. He incorporates ‘white’ people into the discussion, and not just as proponents and perpetrators of slavery. He shows how most … whites perpetuated their own subordination by rejecting alliances with people of color.”
—Kim Scipes, Logos
“This outstanding, insightful original work with profound implications for the fractured working class protest tradition of the United States could not be more timely as working people throughout the world are shamelessly robbed and dispossessed by the financial manipulations of our Wall Street titans still wielding their poison bait of white skin privilege.”
—Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, author of Social Control in Slave Plantation Societies
“Essential reading for all students of race and power in America. This path-breaking research reframes and cuts across the disciplines of history, sociology and politics, shedding a dynamic new light on the important and often hidden phenomenon of race in America’s cultural evolution.”
—Joseph Wilson, co-author Race and Labor Matters in the New US Economy
“One of the great contributions of Allen’s study is a complete debunking of the myth that race and skin color are the same thing.”
—Jonathan Scott, author of Socialist Joy in the Writings of Langston Hughes
“The transition from being poor, dispossessed, Catholic and oppressed when in Ireland, to fully ordained members of the ‘white race’ when in America, with all the privileges, rights and immunities appertaining thereto, illustrates the sociological relativity of notions of race ... [and] confirms Allen’s preference for a ‘sociogenic’ understanding of racial oppression rooted in sociological processes, rather than ‘phylogenic’ or genetic interpretations.”
—Ethnic & Racial Studies
“Allen … an independent scholar … has pursued an idea across the frontier of conventional specializations, supported in his labours by a belief that to determine the origin of white racism will contribute to its eradication. It is difficult to envisage such a work being produced in the wasteland of contemporary academic life.”
—Ecumene
“Allen’s use of the Irish example lends support to the argument that race is a social construction. A strength of Allen’s book is his effort to view race apart from biology, to see racial categories as ever-changing social conventions and not as immutable classifications fixed in nature or the human psyche.”
—Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
“Allen is concerned here with … a comparative analysis of racial oppression in Ireland and in the United States … and the shift in identity among Irish immigrant Catholics, who moved from a group oppressed on racial grounds in Ireland to one defined as ‘white’ in the United States …What pulls the entire discussion together is the notion of ‘Social Control.’ Allen argues that racial oppression (racial social control) is one of various mechanisms a ruling elite can utilize to protect its position in society.”
—Contemporary Sociology
“Allen champions the superiority of socioeconomic over psychocultural approaches to the study of race and slavery … [and] notes, “only by ‘understanding what was peculiar about the Peculiar Institution can one know what is exceptionable about ‘American Exceptionalism.”
—Journal of American History
“Allen sees race as an invention—and he knows who invented it. Racial slavery was the creation of colonial power (or a ruling class, or the bourgeoisie), and what was done in North America was analogous to what was done in Ireland. So the struggle against capitalism and the struggle against race are part of the same campaign.”
—Tribune (London)
“Allen’s two volume masterpiece—The Invention of the White Race—is vital ammunition for those of us engaged in Revolutionary Change because his work helps to expose the current myth of a post-racial US society/world and reveal the underbelly of a dying capitalism’s hyper-racial world of violence, terror and human and natural exploitation.”
—S.E. Anderson, author of The Black Holocaust for Beginners
“If you hope to understand the tangled history of race and class, The Invention of the White Race has to be on your reading list.”
—Will Shetterly, author of Dogland
“The notion of ‘privilege’ is ubiquitous amongst radicals today. But few of them understand its origins in Ted Allen’s conception of ‘white privilege,’ and fewer still have read and wrestled with his masterwork The Invention of the White Race. Allen’s provocative thesis—that the ‘white race’ was a category constructed to suppress class conflict—asks deep and troubling questions about the foundation of the United States and the intersection of race and class, while openly challenging the Left’s fundamental assumptions about social change in this country.”
—Spencer Sunshine, assistant editor of Monthly Review
About the Author
Theodore W. Allen (1919–2005) was an anti–white supremacist, working-class intellectual and activist who began his pioneering work on “white skin privilege” and “white race” privilege in 1965. He co-authored the influential White Blindspot (1967), authored “Can White Workers Radicals Be Radicalized?” (1969), and wrote the ground-breaking Class Struggle and the Origin of Racial Slavery: The Invention of the White Race (1975) before publication of his seminal two-volume classic The Invention of the White Race (1994, 1997).
Start reading The Invention of the White Race, Volume 1 on your Kindle in under a minute.
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Product details
- Publisher : Verso; Second Edition (November 20, 2012)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 372 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1844677699
- ISBN-13 : 978-1844677696
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.98 x 0.99 x 9.26 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#630,576 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #371 in Slavery & Emancipation History
- #402 in Colonialism & Post-Colonialism
- #3,721 in Discrimination & Racism (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
79 global ratings
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Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2019
Verified Purchase
A shameful exposition of my ignorance of history ... and I am a degreed professional.
8 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2016
Verified Purchase
Good information, but really long, and I find electronic versions harder, but that's what was available to me.
It is interesting in that so many slavery defenders use the Irish as examples of "worse" treatment. Comparing the long-term history of the Irish under English persecution, going back hundreds of years, is a better grounds for comparison - though there were some ways in which the Irish were treated more like the American Indians, and some ways in which it makes sense to look at Scottish slavery, all of which Allen does.
The tragic thing becomes that even though the Irish in America had plenty of reasons to understand about prejudice and how damaging it could be, they quickly aligned with it as a way of protecting their own position. It is tragic that now and then people will still not see that allowing the oppression of one group may make your own status look better in comparison, but also holds you down.
The material is still very timely, even though we should have had time and opportunity enough to be better by now.
The funny thing is that in some ways it sounds like this volume's primary purpose was to lay the groundwork for volume 2, but it says some pretty important things on its own.
Part of what the book covers in exhaustive detail is other theories of racism and their shortcomings. That makes the book drag in the beginning, but it is useful as well.
It is interesting in that so many slavery defenders use the Irish as examples of "worse" treatment. Comparing the long-term history of the Irish under English persecution, going back hundreds of years, is a better grounds for comparison - though there were some ways in which the Irish were treated more like the American Indians, and some ways in which it makes sense to look at Scottish slavery, all of which Allen does.
The tragic thing becomes that even though the Irish in America had plenty of reasons to understand about prejudice and how damaging it could be, they quickly aligned with it as a way of protecting their own position. It is tragic that now and then people will still not see that allowing the oppression of one group may make your own status look better in comparison, but also holds you down.
The material is still very timely, even though we should have had time and opportunity enough to be better by now.
The funny thing is that in some ways it sounds like this volume's primary purpose was to lay the groundwork for volume 2, but it says some pretty important things on its own.
Part of what the book covers in exhaustive detail is other theories of racism and their shortcomings. That makes the book drag in the beginning, but it is useful as well.
15 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2018
Verified Purchase
Brilliant. Well researched. Painful. A must read.
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2018
Verified Purchase
Good Read and information
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2018
Verified Purchase
explains some of the confusion, about race
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2013
Verified Purchase
I urge anyone (anti racist white folk especially) who are interested more fully understanding the social control function of white privilege and the national oppression of non white folk in the US and abroad in the form of imperialism. Allen does a excellent job at helping the reader understand the real history of white supremacy, class exploitation and crucially how they are interdependent. Although the content in very down to earth and understandable it is thick intellectually and challenges the reader to think about the nature of class society and possible alternatives. Enjoy
27 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2014
Verified Purchase
I am reading this and find it very interesting and an important historical work. However, the layout and editing is poor and confusing. Also redundant. Many similarly important works have been better presented. This is a work that should be easily read and remembered by all, not just professionals and scholars.
10 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2014
Verified Purchase
Wow!
A "capper" to all that I have previously studied concerning the so-called "white" race! Great book, and I'm still on Volume 1.
A "capper" to all that I have previously studied concerning the so-called "white" race! Great book, and I'm still on Volume 1.
8 people found this helpful
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