THE NATHAN I. HUGGINS LECTURES
Cover: The Problem of Race in the Twenty-first Century, from Harvard University PressCover: The Problem of Race in the Twenty-first Century in PAPERBACK

The Problem of Race in the Twenty-first Century

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PAPERBACK

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$31.00 • £26.95 • €28.95

ISBN 9780674008243

Publication Date: 04/30/2002

Short

160 pages

5 x 7-1/2 inches

The Nathan I. Huggins Lectures

World

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Thomas Holt is a black University of Chicago social and cultural historian whose major work, The Problem of Freedom, is a brilliant, multifaceted account of Jamaican race, labor and politics in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries… Holt asks…whether W.E.B. Du Bois’s comment that the color line is the problem of the twentieth century remains the main question for our century. [He] addresses the issue from a global perspective on two axes: to place race in the context of both the national and global economies, and to adopt a ‘global’ theoretical framework of analysis that situates race historically in terms of the transformation of production regimes from early to late capitalism…in bold but sharp strokes.—Stanley Aronowitz, The Nation

Holt invokes W.E.B. DuBois’s classic line from The Souls of Black Folk that ‘the color line’ was the problem of the twentieth century… Holt’s Problem of Race aims a searchlight at [problems such as] how black men often serve as Rorschach tests for the self-images of white America (Michael Jordan, Colin Powell, ‘Amos ’n Andy’)… [His] finale is a sermonette to the coming generation to ‘live as if the world…were color-blind…as if they were not ‘black.’—Dale Edwyna Smith, The Washington Post Book World

When in 1903 W. E. B. Du Bois said that ‘the problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color-line,’ he probably did not realize he was also defining a key issue of the new millennium. Thomas C. Holt focuses on several aspects of that problem, however, such as the glorification of the black athlete and entertainer at the expense of the average black person, the loss of industrial jobs that affects black workers financially and psychologically, and the dramatic rise of a consumer society that all too often has left black citizens far behind.—Lee Milazzo, The Dallas Morning News

Debates about race often take the form of a mind game designed to establish whether or not a particular word or act is racially motivated… [This book] provides a compelling argument for rethinking our ideas about race.—Frank Furedi, New Statesman

Holt rightly asserts that our racial legacy should be a point of departure—not a destination—in examining the enduring nature of racial enmity. As a nation and as individuals, we must imagine ourselves beyond, while remaining aware of, those forces that are at the root of the enmity.—Vernon Ford, Booklist

Readers will benefit from Holt’s expert and careful examination of these narratives of contradiction and incoherence as he attempts to forecast the reigning racial ethos for the next millennium, just as W.E.B. Du Bois did when he declared that the color line was the problem of the twentieth century. Breaking from traditional paradigms, Holt…focuses on…what role it plays in the economy and in consumer culture… Holt writes in clear, precise prose…and makes an important contribution to both public and academic discussions of race and labor and their intersections in U.S. politics.Publishers Weekly

This very stimulating series of essays provides an insightful and highly readable analysis of the historical trajectory of race and racism in the modern and postmodern eras. A provocative and cogent discussion.—Waldo E. Martin, Jr., author of The Mind of Frederick Douglass

Thomas Holt looks at concepts of race not in narrow American black and white terms, but globally. In his view, the twenty-first century offers challenges more subtle, but scarcely less daunting than the twentieth. A book worth pondering.—William S. McFeely, author of Frederick Douglass

Profoundly—and by turns playfully—the insightful historian Thomas Holt juxtaposes the concepts of race, culture, and nation with the figures of Jack Johnson, Joe Louis, and Michael Jordan. His analysis nourishes the intellect as it dazzles the reader.—Nell Irvin Painter, author of Sojourner Truth

One of America’s major domestic problems is insightfully analyzed in this thoughtful book. Thomas Holt provides an original framework to help us formulate a conception of race that is more appropriate for the twenty-first century.—William Julius Wilson, author of The Bridge over the Racial Divide

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