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Race or Ethnicity?: On Black and Latino Identity
Hardback

Race or Ethnicity?: On Black and Latino Identity

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What is race? What is ethnicity? Should we think of them as identities? Can they be effectively individuated? How are they related? How do the relations between them influence pressing issues concerned with social identity, gender, racism, assimilation, exploitation, justice, the law, and public policy? And how are the answers to these questions affected by the Black and Latino experience in the United States -From the Preface

This collection of new essays explores the relation between race and ethnicity and its social and political implications. Although much work has been done on the philosophy of race in the past century in the United States, the concept of ethnicity has only recently awoken the interest of American philosophers, and the relations between race and ethnicity remain largely unexamined.

The discussion is divided into two parts dealing, on the one hand, with the nature and the relation between race and ethnicity and, on the other, with the social consequences of the complex relations between them. Part I explores in particular the debated topic of racial and ethnic identities: Does it make sense to speak of racial and ethnic identities, and especially of black and Latino identities? And if it does make sense, how should these identities be conceptualized, and how are they related to gender? Part II examines how race and ethnicity have influenced the lot of some social groups in significant ways: How do racially defined institutions deal with racial assimilation? How do different conceptions of race and ethnicity influence public policy and various forms of racism? How can exploited racial and ethnic groups be effectively recognized? And what is the role of affect in social justice as dispensed by the courts?

Contributors: Linda Mart n Alcoff, Syracuse University; K. Anthony Appiah, Princeton University; Robert Bernasconi, University of Memphis; J. Angelo Corlett, San Diego State University; J. L. A. Garc a, Boston College; Jorge J. E. Gracia, University at Buffalo; Howard McGary, Rutgers University; Eduardo Mendieta, Stony Brook University; Susana Nuccetelli, University of Texas-Pan American; Kenneth Shockley, University at Buffalo; Diego A. von Vacano, Texas A & M University; Naomi Zack, University of Oregon

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Country
United States
Date
15 March 2007
Pages
304
ISBN
9780801445446

What is race? What is ethnicity? Should we think of them as identities? Can they be effectively individuated? How are they related? How do the relations between them influence pressing issues concerned with social identity, gender, racism, assimilation, exploitation, justice, the law, and public policy? And how are the answers to these questions affected by the Black and Latino experience in the United States -From the Preface

This collection of new essays explores the relation between race and ethnicity and its social and political implications. Although much work has been done on the philosophy of race in the past century in the United States, the concept of ethnicity has only recently awoken the interest of American philosophers, and the relations between race and ethnicity remain largely unexamined.

The discussion is divided into two parts dealing, on the one hand, with the nature and the relation between race and ethnicity and, on the other, with the social consequences of the complex relations between them. Part I explores in particular the debated topic of racial and ethnic identities: Does it make sense to speak of racial and ethnic identities, and especially of black and Latino identities? And if it does make sense, how should these identities be conceptualized, and how are they related to gender? Part II examines how race and ethnicity have influenced the lot of some social groups in significant ways: How do racially defined institutions deal with racial assimilation? How do different conceptions of race and ethnicity influence public policy and various forms of racism? How can exploited racial and ethnic groups be effectively recognized? And what is the role of affect in social justice as dispensed by the courts?

Contributors: Linda Mart n Alcoff, Syracuse University; K. Anthony Appiah, Princeton University; Robert Bernasconi, University of Memphis; J. Angelo Corlett, San Diego State University; J. L. A. Garc a, Boston College; Jorge J. E. Gracia, University at Buffalo; Howard McGary, Rutgers University; Eduardo Mendieta, Stony Brook University; Susana Nuccetelli, University of Texas-Pan American; Kenneth Shockley, University at Buffalo; Diego A. von Vacano, Texas A & M University; Naomi Zack, University of Oregon

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Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Country
United States
Date
15 March 2007
Pages
304
ISBN
9780801445446