Lee D. Baker explores what racial categories mean to the American public and how these meanings are reinforced by anthropology, popular culture, and the law. Focusing on the period between two landmark Supreme Court dec...

Buy Now From Amazon

Lee D. Baker explores what racial categories mean to the American public and how these meanings are reinforced by anthropology, popular culture, and the law. Focusing on the period between two landmark Supreme Court decisions—Plessy v. Ferguson (the so-called "separate but equal" doctrine established in 1896) and Brown v. Board of Education (the public school desegregation decision of 1954)—Baker shows how racial categories change over time.

Baker paints a vivid picture of the relationships between specific African American and white scholars, who orchestrated a paradigm shift within the social sciences from ideas based on Social Darwinism to those based on cultural relativism. He demonstrates that the greatest impact on the way the law codifies racial differences has been made by organizations such as the NAACP, which skillfully appropriated the new social science to exploit the politics of the Cold War.


Similar Products

Working Toward Whiteness: How America's Immigrants Became White: The Strange Journey from Ellis Island to the SuburbsAnthropology and the Racial Politics of CultureShapeshifters: Black Girls and the Choreography of CitizenshipThe Gift: The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic SocietiesThe Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist RuinsThe Power EliteMaking PCR: A Story of BiotechnologyDebt - Updated and Expanded: The First 5,000 Years