Description
A significant re-writing of the history of class formation in the US
About the Author
Steve Martinot is Instructor at the Center for Interdisciplinary Programs at San Francisco State University. He has edited two previous books, and translated Racism by Albert Memmi.
Reviews
"In fine accounts of the 17th-century Virginia colony, post-Revolutionary class and racial formation, Civil-Rights-era affirmative action debates, and the languages of whiteness, Steve Martinot offers a clear and ultimately clarifying work of scholarly synthesis. The Rule of Racialization tracks the structures of feeling and thinking-illogical, unconscious, baffling, and vestigial though they may be-that remain the driving forces of racialization and racism today."-Eric Lott, University of Virginia, author of Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class "This book deserves to be consulted not just by students of race and ethnicity, but also by those interested in the failures of American socialism and ore concrete issues of affirmative action."-Ethnic and Racial Studies "[This book] makes an indispensable contribution to understanding the origins of racism in the United States, and [it] offers a useful framework to clarify the interconnection between economic and racial domination."-Contemporary Sociology "This writer steps boldly forward with a comprehensive exploration of race and class in American history... The prose is dense but lucid, theoretically rigorous but oriented to the problems of achieving equality. More than a work of historical analysis, it suggests a positive, large plan of action."-American Historical Review "This is a sweeping historical survey of racial construction in the United States since early European colonial settlement."-Journal of Social History
Book Information
ISBN 9781566399821
Author Steve Martinot
Format Paperback
Page Count 280
Imprint Temple University Press,U.S.
Publisher Temple University Press,U.S.
Dimensions(mm) 254mm * 178mm * 20mm