Foreword, Joe Feagin Preface: A White Woman From the South1. I Could Tell My Life Story Without Mentioning My Race: Exploring Everyday Whiteness 2. I Began to See How Important Race Could Be: Turning Points in Whiteness 3. Being Born in the U.S. to White Parents is Almost Boring: Whiteness as a Meaningless Identity4. I Feel 'Whiteness' When I Hear People Blaming Whites: Whiteness as Cultural Stigmatization5. I Was the Loser in this Rat Race: Whiteness as Economic Disadvantage 6. Being White Is Like Being Free: Whiteness and the Potential for AntiracismAppendix A: Sample Validity Appendix B: Sample Differences: North/South or Rural/Urban? Appendix C. Autobiography Guide
Karyn McKinney is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Penn State University, Altoona College. She is the co-author of The Many Costs of Racism with Joe Feagin, and her work has appeared in Contemporary Sociology,Ethnic and RacialStudies, the Journal of Family Issues and the AmericanJournal of Sociology.
"Being White is a brilliant book! Karyn McKinney reveals how a
common array of evasions, disavowals, and rationalizations enables
white college students to obscure the role that race plays in their
own lives and in the lives of others. The empathy, insights, and
analysis contained in this book offer an unparalleled understanding
of the inner workings of contemporary whiteness." -- George
Lipsitz, Professor of American Studies, University of California at
Santa Cruz
"Being White expands and deepens our knowledge of whiteness in
vital ways. Karyn McKinney captures the racial obliviousness that
shapes the world of white youth in America. This condition, in part
based on ignorance, and in part self-serving, damages their lives,
their dreams, and their potential as human beings. Yet McKinney
does not only indict. She also shows white youth challenging racism
and moving against it. Being White is both a serious indictment and
a testament of hope. Highly recommended!" -- Howard Winant,
Professor of Sociology, University of California at Santa
Barbara
"Karyn McKinney is one of the few race scholars in the United
States to empirically examine how young whites reconcile white
privilege in an era of colorblindness. Being White gives voice to
whites' narratives about what it means to be white that are
typically never heard beyond the insularity of all-white social
networks. Her analysis about the ways in which white privilege is
reproduced and justified through a process often invisible to young
whites is a major contribution to our understanding of race
relations." -- Charles A. Gallagher, Associate Professor, Race and
Urban Concentration Chair, Georgia State University
"In this fine book Karyn McKinney goes boldly where few scholars
have ventured. She is perhaps the first scholar to explore
thoroughly how young white Americans of this era think about-or,
often, do not think about-their white identities, privileges, and
racist society. McKinney probes cleverly and deeply into how young
white Americans relate to being white and their evanescent sense of
whiteness." -- Joe Feagin, Ella C. McFadden Professor of Sociology,
Texas A&M University
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