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One Sheaf, One Vine: Racially Conscious White Americans Talk About Race

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ONE SHEAF, ONE VINE RACIALLY CONSCIOUS WHITE AMERICANS TALK ABOUT RACE This book is made up of the personal statements about race from seventeen white Americans. What they share is that, for them, the fact that they are white is more than an incidental, insignificant, or peripheral aspect of their being; it is central to how they view themselves and conduct their lives. The men and women you will meet in this book aren't public figures or leaders of organizations. They are everyday people: a postal worker from Philadelphia, a college student from Texas, an attorney from New York City, a bookstore owner from Washington State, an appliance repair man from Connecticut, a teacher from Chicago, and so on. We have a very negative image of racially conscious and committed whites gained largely from the media: neo-Nazi bigots, menacing skin heads, thugs who commit hate crimes. We are informed about people of this sort, but we don't hear from them. They aren't on television news shows speaking for themselves. They don't make movies or publish books. Politicians don't articulate their perspective or advocate their positions. Journalists and intellectuals don't write about them unless it is to be little them. Schools make no attempt to deal with them objectively. In this book, you'll hear from them. The words in this book are the speakers' as they spoke them; they haven't been altered, softened, or censored. And more than come to know their thoughts on race, you'll meet these people as human beings. Some of them you won't soon forget. Democracy depends on the free exchange of ideas. You make the call whether what these Americans have to say is to any extent valid. You decide whether what they say has any implications for what you believe and the way you believe.

173 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 2003

43 people want to read

About the author

Robert S. Griffin

12 books8 followers
Professor in the College of Education and Social Services at the University of Vermon.

Griffin has written three books on White European heritage and two books on education of children.

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Profile Image for Vagabond of Letters, DLitt.
593 reviews411 followers
January 12, 2020
6/10.

Interesting anthropological study. Nothing really new here, but contains only interview available of Alex Linder. No other interviews with people who would go on to become personages. Other participants range from acknowledging the salience of race at one end to flirting with National Socialism at the other. The interviews are repetitive (as to be expected), and one can quickly see some shared background experience (15 of the 17 either grew up in areas significantly less homogeneous than the mean, or lived through the transformation from homogeneity to heterogeneity, etc.). Finding common threads of this sort is the most interesting part of the book. The interviews are also largely autobiographical. There is no larger or unified political or ideological framework presented, nor is there theoretical discussion of race.

This is not as interesting nor informative as Griffin's other book, 'The Fame of a Dead Man's Deeds'.
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