A pathbreaking work by one of the leading scholars in the field, Iron Cages provides a unique comparative analysis of white attitudes toward Asians, Blacks, Mexicans, and Native Americans in the nineteenth century, offering a cohesive study of the foundations of race and culture in America. With a new epilogue that assesses the prospect for race relations in contemporary American society, Iron Cages is important reading for anyone interested in the history of race relations in America. In his provocative new epilogue, "The Fourth Iron Cage," Takaki focuses on race in contemporary society within the context of America's nuclear arms-oriented ceconomy. He compares the Asian-American "model minority" and the black underclass, and extends his analysis to Native Americans, Chicanos, and Puerto Ricans.
This book talks about the hardships and racial inequalities that Asians, blacks Latinos, and other nonwhite races had to deal with and work through every day and how they strived forward through adversity and struggle to work harder even though they got less.
racial domination in the development of 19th century capitalistic America. Study of blacks, Indians, Mexicans and Asians. Cultural hegemony (per Gramsci) --- a certain way of life is dominant. What white men dictated affected everyone else. The minorities were exploited for their cheap labor. The term "iron cages" is a metaphor from Max Weber, meaning complete oppression.
I love Ron Takaki, not only has he conducted pivotal research, but his own personal story is so compelling. He also truly believes in education and has a passion for it. Here's a book that will teach you things about history that most of us don't learn in school.
Have you ever read a book that made water boil and your toenails stand on end? Want to know how fucked up this country's original game plan really was? This book is a fucking mind boggler. It will leave you booking plane tickets to Prague.