Prologue: Sociology as Autobiography
Introduction: Racial Accommodation and the Misconceptualization of
Racism
Understanding Linguistic Racial Accommodation and
ConfrontationLinguistic Racial Accommodation from Slavery to the
Civil Rights Movement Linguistic Racial Accommodation and
Confrontation from the Civil Rights Movement to The Declining
Significance of RaceTheoretical Fragmentation: The White Backlash
and Its Legacy of Failure Defining Racism: Beyond Mini-Racism and
the “Race” as Agency ConceptConfronting Racially Accommodative
Language by Conceptualizing Racism as a System of Oppression
Conclusion: Lessons Learned and Challenges Remaining: Toward a More
Honest Conceptualization of Racism
Epilogue: Unfinished Business in Confronting Racially Accommodative
Language
Noel A. Cazenave is professor of sociology at the University of Connecticut, where he also teaches in the Urban and Community Studies program. In addition to many journal articles, book chapters, and other publications, he coauthored Welfare Racism: Playing the Race Card against America’s Poor, which won five book awards, and has more recently published Impossible Democracy: The Unlikely Success of the War on PovertyCommunity Action Programs and The Urban Racial State: Managing Race Relations in American Cities.
Cazenave offers a critical reading of the language of racism in
sociological thought and US society, providing a searing assessment
of how scholars, politicians, journalists, and everyday people
understand racism and use language to deny, distance, and evade it.
Specifically, he argues that dominant formulations of the concept
obscure, evade, and erase the systematic and structural aspects of
racial oppression, and instead equivocate and accommodate through
appeals to individual beliefs, psychological biases, and universal
capacities. Moreover, he asserts, such formulations reinforce
racial hierarchies and racist exclusions, making it more difficult
to study, understand, and change them. In doing so, Cazenave offers
a strongly worded indictment of sociology while advancing
discussions of racism today. Key to this is his sensitive reading
of the history of theory and method in sociological thought, sharp
assessment of shifting racial structures, and a keen eye for
deciphering the entanglements of race, power, and language. This is
an important text for scholars who study these subjects. Of equal
importance is its usefulness in the training of future academics,
social analysts, and policy makers. Summing Up: Highly recommended.
Upper-division undergraduates and above.
*Choice Reviews*
Noel A. Cazenave is one of the most insightful critics of
contemporary social science theories of ‘race’ and racism. A
courageous scholar who taught the first sociology course titled
‘White Racism,’ he demonstrates exceptional talent as a critical
social scientist working to force deeper understandings of systemic
racism’s dynamics—always with an eye toward facilitating antiracism
practice and movements.
*Joe R. Feagin, Texas A&M University*
Powerful and provocative! Noel Cazenave expertly demonstrates that
words do matter, and that the misleading definitions of racism that
dominate social science analysis have real political and
intellectual consequences. Conceptualizing Racism makes an
important contribution to the understanding of racism in the United
States.
*Ashley "Woody" Doane, University of Hartford*
Recently, leading race scholars issued a call to address the
stagnant waters in the area of sociology of race and ethnicity,
particularly in light of new theoretical and empirical
understandings of racism. Professor Cazenave’s book,
Conceptualizing Racism, is a step in the right direction.
Unabashedly and in a no-holds-barred fashion, Cazenave outlines the
challenges with current race theories and suggests a new way to
think about racial oppression through language. This book is a
must-buy and must-read in today’s world of racial accommodation.
WORDS MATTER!
*David G. Embrick, University of Connecticut*
Conceptualizing Racism provides an original and penetrating
analysis of the epistemological and political underpinnings of race
knowledge in the social sciences. Written with passion and
conviction, it challenges the prevailing myopia and obfuscation
about the nature of racism, and compels us to confront the systemic
racism still embedded in the nation’s major political and economic
institutions.
*Stephen Steinberg, Queens College and Graduate Center, City
University of New York; author of Race Relations: A Critique*
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