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The Lost Black Scholar Resurrecting Allison Davis In American Social Thought David A Varel

  • SKU: BELL-51442762
The Lost Black Scholar Resurrecting Allison Davis In American Social Thought David A Varel
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The Lost Black Scholar Resurrecting Allison Davis In American Social Thought David A Varel instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Chicago Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.81 MB
Pages: 304
Author: David A. Varel
ISBN: 9780226534916, 022653491X
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

The Lost Black Scholar Resurrecting Allison Davis In American Social Thought David A Varel by David A. Varel 9780226534916, 022653491X instant download after payment.

Allison Davis (1902–83), a preeminent black scholar and social science pioneer, is perhaps best known for his groundbreaking investigations into inequality, Jim Crow America, and the cultural biases of intelligence testing. Davis, one of America’s first black anthropologists and the first tenured African American professor at a predominantly white university, produced work that had tangible and lasting effects on public policy, including contributions to Brown v. Board of Education, the federal Head Start program, and school testing practices. Yet Davis remains largely absent from the historical record. For someone who generated such an extensive body of work this marginalization is particularly surprising. But it is also revelatory.
In The Lost Black Scholar, David A. Varel tells Davis’s compelling story, showing how a combination of institutional racism, disciplinary eclecticism, and iconoclastic thinking effectively sidelined him as an intellectual. A close look at Davis’s career sheds light not only on the racial politics of the academy but also the costs of being an innovator outside of the mainstream. Equally important, Varel argues that Davis exemplifies how black scholars led the way in advancing American social thought. Even though he was rarely acknowledged for it, Davis refuted scientific racism and laid bare the environmental roots of human difference more deftly than most of his white peers, bypushing social science in bold new directions.Varel shows how Davis effectively helped to lay the groundwork for the civil rights movement.

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