When Affirmative Action Was White

An Untold History of Racial Inequality in Twentieth-Century America

3 March 2023

Description

The ground-breaking, “provocative” ( The New York Times Book Review) work that exposed the racially discriminatory precursors of affirmative action, now updated with a new introduction

With this explosive analysis, Ira Katznelson fundamentally recast our understanding of twentieth-century American history, demonstrating that the key programs passed during the New Deal and Fair Deal eras were not, as we are so often told, fundamentally equitable or impartial, but discriminatory in the way they deliberately excluded African Americans from benefits. In fact, Katznelson writes, the gap between black and white Americans actually widened following this period, owing, in no small part, to the segregationist designs of southern Democrats. Now featuring a new introduction that situates this saga within the wider context of twentieth- and twenty-first-century history, When Affirmative Action Was White remains, tragically, as salient as ever, providing both a “painful understanding of how politics and race intersect” (Henry Louis Gates Jr.) and a broad justification for continuing affirmative action programs.

Reviews

"A fresh, highly readable, first-rate history." — Sanford D. Horowitt, The San Francisco Chronicle

"A penetrating new analysis." — Nick Kotz, The New York Times Book Review

"Katznelson’s explosive analysis provides us with a new and painful understanding of how politics and race intersect." — Henry Louis Gates Jr.

"Ira Katznelson has made a major contribution to the affirmative action debate…[His] book makes as strong a case as I have ever seen for vigorous action to bring about equal opportunities for African-Americans." — George M. Frederickson, The New York Review of Books

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Paperback

9781324051084

140 x 211 mm • 272 pages

£14.99

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