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Searching for Whitopia: An Improbable Journey to the Heart of White America Hardcover – October 6, 2009

4.3 out of 5 stars 33 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Hyperion; First Edition edition (October 6, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1401322689
  • ISBN-13: 978-1401322687
  • Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (33 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #654,838 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By S. J. Snyder on March 11, 2010
Format: Hardcover
Rich Benjamin goes to a number of Whitopias (the concept is defined, demographically, in appendices) and actually lives in three of them. He approaches his subject without apparent bias aforethought, and with excellent research eyes.

In his research he distinguished between different types of Whitopias, whether the reasons for their development are more conscious or unconscious. Beyond that, he extensively interviews individual residents, to give the different Whitopias an individualized profile.

He also notes that natives don't always "cotton to" outside whites.

He provides a few statistics that I didn't know, as part of the possibility America may be "majority nonwhite" by 2050. For the whites fleeing blacks and Hispanics for purely racial, or racial-economic reasons, and at the same time, often fleeing Asians because "their kids study too hard for our kids," he has "bad" news I didn't know... the Asian population is growing faster than even the Hispanic population.

Beyond that, he asks what do whitopias, more exurban ones like Forsyth County, Ga., than freestanding St. George, Utah or the Idaho Panhandle, mean for the future of American infrastructure, whith highways, sewer, zoning tussles and more. And, what do all whitopias mean in terms of future American cohesiveness?

Without offering undue condemnation, Benjamin offers condemnation where it is due for these exurbs being used as a shield to avoid discussing race, and worries that broader social integration may have peaked in much of the country, at least for now.

If you want a very insightful -- and very well-written -- take on modern demographics, this is it!
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
I enjoyed this book. Mr. Benjamin did an exceptional job documenting the lives of White Americans in the whitest counties in the U.S. His interviews are insightful, as well as his commentary on housing policies, discrimination and the xenophobia that runs in these communities, be it latent or patent. This book saw publication in October 2009, merely 9 months after President Obama's inauguration. I would like to see a sequel to this book with updates on the characters' lives and how these communities have fared in the past 5-7 years or so.
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Format: Hardcover
I am coming to this book "only" 7 years after it was published and almost a decade since Rich Benjamin spent time living in three different "whitopias" around the country, yet, sadly, many of his observations are still relevant today. And while this book has been around for an extended time, it is still very worth reading--far more than Waking Up White, for example, even though that was just published in 2014.

One of the most refreshing characteristics about the entire book is the author's favorable and pleasing characterizations of the individuals he interacted with during his brave experiment in living in overtly segregated communities, even some who were expressing white supremacist views directly to him. "The majority of whites in predominately white communities across our heartland are endearing and kind. ...day-to-day interaction in some of the whitest parts of America, I discover, is quite pleasant." (p 184) As I read this and similar comments, I wondered, and worried about, whether he would be able to say the same thing if he were to try this bold experiment today.

Just because he is able to see the real people behind some problematic attitudes, however, he does not gloss over the significant issues he sees being lived out in so many parts of the country. "Structural racism exists across institutions, public policy, and other important domains (education, the judiciary, real estate, etc.). The difference between interpersonal racism and structural racism is huge." (p 190) Once again, I could only feel deep sadness, frustration, and anger, when I considered how little progress (and perhaps how much regression) has been made since the book was published.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
A most enlightening and entertaing book. The enterprising Mr. Benjamin takes you on a rather curious journey across America into the heart of whiteness. Frankly, I do not believe anyone should be surprised by any of the relevations or insights highlighted in this book, because most of us with any fundamental appreciation of American history and social psychology, probably were aware of these communities already. This book confirms that which we always knew to be true. Segregated America still exists in the hearts and minds of many people. It is rather disheartening, on one level, to think that any group of Americans should still feel the need to separate themselves from other Amerians; but, Mr. Benjamin has clearly illustrated the divide which still exists in American society in the 21st century.
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Format: Hardcover
I really enjoyed this book. I felt that Benjamin handled his interactions with residents of the Whitopian locations he spent a fair amount of time in, very well. Through ethnographic research and open-minded analysis, he attempts to paint white people who live in Whitopias as complex people who are not necessarily overtly racist. Benjamin, a Black American, felt rather welcomed in all of the Whitopian towns that he lived in for his 2 years of field research to write the book.

I was first excited to learn about the book because I was curious how a Black identified American would navigate pre-dominantly white class privileged (mostly conservative) towns, and remain good spirited-- especially being part of events in which people had affiliations to Aryan Nation... or meeting with a white guy who half-jokingly tells him that when he is alone with his white friends, they refer to Black people using the n-word.

Benjamin provides a lot of citations from the statistics and other types of data he uses to analyze Whitopian resident's responses to his inquiries about immigration, race relations, politics, and beyond.

He also speaks of how he is sick of the binary of "black-white" America, and that America is too diverse for the mainstream to keep on falling back on the old school way of looking at race relations, which paints the picture that it's an easy binary of black/white. He brings in class, age, geography, and the fact that Latinos, Asians, and people who are multi-ethnic destroy the old race relations model of "black-white" America.

All and all, I enjoyed reading the book. He is a good writer and deals with the subject of the "Obama" era of race and immigration in a very engaging and not so judgmental way.
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