White Poverty

How Exposing Myths About Race and Class Can Reconstruct American Democracy

19 September 2025

Territory Rights — Worldwide.

Description

A generational work with far-reaching social and political implications

Challenging the definition of who is poor in America, in White Poverty, William J. Barber II writes about the lies that prevent us from seeing the pain of poor white American families who have been offered little more than their “whiteness” and angry social media posts to sustain them in an economy where the costs of housing, healthcare and education have skyrocketed while wages have stagnated for all but the very rich. White Poverty, lifts the hope for a new “moral fusion movement” that seeks to unite people “who have been pitted against one another by politicians (and billionaires) who depend on the poorest of us not being here.” One of the most empathetic and visionary approaches to American poverty in decades, Barber braids poignant autobiographical recollections with astute historical analysis, contending that tens of millions of America’s poorest earners have much in common.

Reviews

"Barber is simply a ‘watchman,’ one who must ‘cry aloud, spare not,’ as the prophet Isaiah exhorted. ‘I’ve written this book to ask America to look its poor—all its poor—in the face,’ Barber writes. That seems to be the perennial burden of the poverty writer: turning the heads of the comfortable toward all the ragged desperation just outside their gates... Today voter suppression, a widespread sense of powerlessness from years of being held down, and the decline of unions have combined to undercut the political power of the American poor. Reverend Barber wants to change that. In exploited, left-behind communities where others too often see only desperation and misery, Barber sees power. Where others see division, Barber sees the potential for unity. And where others descend into hopelessness, Barber expresses a prophetic imagination. “It is the task of the prophet to bring to expression the new realities against the more visible ones of the old order,’ the theologian Walter Brueggemann has written. It’s what a watchman does.”" — Matthew Desmond, The New York Review of Books

Paperback

9781324096757

140 x 210 mm • 288 pages

£13.99

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Ebook

9781324094883

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