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Culture Of Intolerance Chauvinism Class And Racism In The United States Mark Nathan Cohen

  • SKU: BELL-50353974
Culture Of Intolerance Chauvinism Class And Racism In The United States Mark Nathan Cohen
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Culture Of Intolerance Chauvinism Class And Racism In The United States Mark Nathan Cohen instant download after payment.

Publisher: Yale University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 18.63 MB
Pages: 344
Author: Mark Nathan Cohen
ISBN: 9780300147537, 0300147538
Language: English
Year: 2008

Product desciption

Culture Of Intolerance Chauvinism Class And Racism In The United States Mark Nathan Cohen by Mark Nathan Cohen 9780300147537, 0300147538 instant download after payment.

Americans increasingly blame the failures of minority individuals in our society on "racial" inferiority. Anthropologist Mark Nathan Cohen argues cogently that the problems are cultural, not "racial," and that they are rooted in the assumptions of mainstream American culture, not in the biological or cultural failings of "others."
By summarizing scientific evidence proving that "races" do not exist and that few biological traits actually correlate with the color of one’s skin, Cohen shows that differences in ability cannot be linked to "race." The growing gap between rich and poor and the economic subordination of minority groups, he says, are rooted in the arbitrary rules that govern American society. Culture constrains our ability to understand and appreciate the actions of others and often prevents us from seeing the consequences of our own actions or realizing our alternatives. American perceptions of what constitute merit, health, hygiene, freedom, progress, property, economics, justice—and even our own history—are distorted. Our insistence that ours is the best or only view promotes intolerance and racism. Cohen shows that definitions of intelligence, IQ tests, hiring practices, and evaluations of job performance contain many more cultural biases than we recognize and thus restrict the opportunities of minority individuals.
By breaking down American cultural assumptions, Cohen offers a strong defense of affirmative action and multicultural education. He concludes with some suggestions for the future—to end the racism and indifference to one another that mark our society.

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