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Seller's Description:
Very good in very good jacket. Illustrated sparingly in color and in black and white. ix, 323 pages. 8vo, grey cloth-backed boards (cocked), d.w. (dust-soiled). Berkeley: University of California Press, (2002). Very good in a very good dust wrapper.
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Seller's Description:
Good in good dust jacket. First Edition. first edition book, includes the dust jacket (light scuff marks) Very Clean Copy-Over 500, 000 Internet Orders Filled.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. Very Good condition. Good dust jacket. A copy that may have a few cosmetic defects. May also contain light spine creasing or a few markings such as an owner's name, short gifter's inscription or light stamp.
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Seller's Description:
2pp photoplates. Minor rubbing. VG. 24x15cm, ix, 323 pp. Contents: Still White: All about Eve, Critical White Studies, and Getting Over Whiteness; Smear Campaign: Giuliani, the Holy Virgin Mary, and the Critical Study of Whiteness; White Looks and Limbaugh's Laugh; White Workers, New Democrats, and Affirmative Action; "Hertz, Don't It? " White " Colorblindness" and the Mark(et)ings of O. J. Simpson; Toward Nonwhite Histories: Nonwhite Radicalism: Du Bois, John Brown, and Black Resistance; White Slavery, Abolition, and Coalition: Languages of Race, Class, and Gender; The Pursuit of Whiteness: Property, Terror, and National Expansion, 1790-I860; Inbetween Peoples: Race, Nationality, and the "New-Immigrant" Working Class; Plotting against Eurocentrism: The 1929 Surrealist Map of the World; The Past / Presence of Nonwhiteness: What If Labor Were Not White and Male? Mumia Time or Sweeney Time? ; In Conclusion: Elvis, Wiggers, and Crossing Over to Nonwhiteness ["David R. Roediger's powerful book argues that in its political workings, its distribution of advantages, and its unspoken assumptions, the United States is a "still white" nation. Race is decidedly not over. The critical portraits of contemporary icons that lead off the book--Rush Limbaugh, Bill Clinton, O.J. Simpson, and Rudolph Giuliani--insist that continuities in white power and white identity are best understood by placing the recent past in historical context. Roediger illuminates that history in an incisive critique of the current scholarship on whiteness and an account of race-transcending radicalism exemplified by vanguards such as W.E.B. Du Bois and John Brown..