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Nice Racism

How Progressive White People Perpetuate Racial Harm

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
2 of 4 copies available
2 of 4 copies available
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
Building on the groundwork laid in the New York Times bestseller White Fragility, Robin DiAngelo explores how a culture of niceness inadvertently promotes racism.

In White Fragility, Robin DiAngelo explained how racism is a system into which all white people are socialized and challenged the belief that racism is a simple matter of good people versus bad. DiAngelo also made a provocative claim: white progressives cause the most daily harm to people of color. In Nice Racism, her follow-up work, she explains how they do so. Drawing on her background as a sociologist and over 25 years working as an anti-racist educator, she picks up where White Fragility left off and moves the conversation forward.
Writing directly to white people as a white person, DiAngelo identifies many common white racial patterns and breaks down how well-intentioned white people unknowingly perpetuate racial harm. These patterns include:
-rushing to prove that we are “not racist”;
-downplaying white advantage;
-romanticizing Black, Indigenous and other peoples of color (BIPOC);
-pretending white segregation “just happens”;
-expecting BIPOC people to teach us about racism;
-carefulness;
-and feeling immobilized by shame.
DiAngelo explains how spiritual white progressives seeking community by co-opting Indigenous and other groups’ rituals create separation, not connection. She challenges the ideology of individualism and explains why it is OK to generalize about white people, and she demonstrates how white people who experience other oppressions still benefit from systemic racism. Writing candidly about her own missteps and struggles, she models a path forward, encouraging white readers to continually face their complicity and embrace courage, lifelong commitment, and accountability.
Nice Racism is an essential work for any white person who recognizes the existence of systemic racism and white supremacy and wants to take steps to align their values with their actual practice. BIPOC readers may also find the “insiders” perspective useful for navigating whiteness.
Includes a study guide.
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    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2021
      The author of White Fragility suggests that with friends like White progressives, people of color need no other enemies. In opening, DiAngelo recalls a Black friend who, for various reasons, was finding it uncomfortable to address White audiences. Observing her and the group before her, "I saw a metaphor for colonialism." A Black person was doing the hard work of interpreting racism, and a White audience was receiving her insights without breaking a sweat themselves. DiAngelo makes very good points simply in noting how difficult White people--especially those who consider themselves progressive and who bill themselves as colorblind and open to friendships across the racial divide--find it to actually hear about the issue of racism. That issue is central, because "our identities are not separate from the white supremacist society in which we are raised." In that regard, merely maintaining that he or she is "nice," well-intended, and open-minded does little good. DiAngelo writes that her aim is not to explain Black people to White audiences but instead to "teach white people about ourselves in relation to Black and other people of color." One way to engage is to become an active learner with an eye not simply to nonracism but to anti-racism, to recognize that there really is such a thing as White privilege, and to build "authentic cross-racial relationships." The author provides enough proscriptions that a reader might feel as if a minefield of potential faux pas lies between good intention and meaningful action. But that's just the point, and she's certainly willing to own the assumptions and mores of her progressive kin. "As white people," she writes, "we tend to focus on the personal impact of receiving feedback on our racism without acknowledging the cost to BIPOC people for giving us this feedback." Altogether, it's a valuable primer to be read alongside the work of other anti-racist activists such as Ibram X. Kendi and Johnnetta Cole. A pointed reminder that good intentions aren't enough to break the cycle of racism.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2021
      The 2020 murder of George Floyd by police officer Derek Chauvin brought about an explosion of white interest in racism, and books like DiAngelo's White Fragility flew off the shelves as white progressives sought to educate themselves. But white commitment to antiracism can be transient, self-centered, and fraught with unacknowledged racism, which can do lasting harm to the very people of color to whom white progressives claim they wish to be allies. DiAngelo unpacks the social dynamics at play in so-called "nice racism," exploring common strategies white liberals use to center themselves and maintain their own comfort. Using examples from the author's personal experience of witnessing these dynamics in progressive spaces, the book carefully delineates manifestations of white progressive racism and breaks down the reasons they are problematic and how to do better. DiAngelo doesn't let herself off the hook: the pervasive racism of white culture means that no white person is fully free of it, even those who dedicate their time--and, as in DiAngelo's case, their careers--to eradicating it. Nice Racism offers a road map for white liberals to understand their role in upholding white supremacy, and the tools for those liberals to know and do better.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: White Fragility became a best-seller and appeared on many antiracism reading lists; order DiAngelo's timely follow-up accordingly.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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