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Intellectuals and Race by Thomas Sowell — book cover

Intellectuals and Race

by Thomas Sowell
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Overview

Thomas Sowell gathers a wide range of evidence to test the underlying assumptions about race that have prevailed at different times among intellectuals. Sowell's ultimate concern is the impact of intellectual movements on the larger society, both past and present. These ideas and crusades have ranged widely from racial theories of intelligence to eugenics and multiculturalism. In addition to in-depth examinations of these and other issues, Intellectuals and Race explores the incentives, visions, and rationales that drive intellectuals at the highest levels to conclusions that have often turned out to be counterproductive or even disastrous.

About the Author, Thomas Sowell

Thomas Sowell is the Rose and Milton Friedman Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, and has taught economics at Cornell, UCLA, Amherst, and other academic institutions. He is the author of Intellectuals and Society, Dismantling America, Economic Facts and Fallacies, and the classic Basic Economics, which has been translated into six languages. Sowell has published in both academic journals and in such popular media as the Wall Street Journal, Forbes magazine, and Fortune, and he writes a syndicated column that appears in newspapers across the country. He lives in Stanford, California.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
“Sowell brings an all-too-rare perspective to whatever he writes about — that of a conservative black intellectual, especially valuable for this book’s topic.”

Kirkus Reviews

A conservative professor of economics and public policy argues that conventional attitudes about racism and social injustice are not only wrong, but harmful as well, in an analysis that will spark outrage among the liberal intellectuals that he targets. Sowell (The Housing Boom and Bust, 2009, etc.) understates the case when he writes that he has arrived at "many conclusions very different from those currently prevailing in the media, in politics or in academia." The result of that common liberal consensus, he charges, "has been a steady drumbeat of grievance and victimhood ideologies, from the media, from educational institutions and from other institutions permeated by the vision of the intelligentsia." As a member of the media, an educator, an intellectual and a black man (who often writes about racial issues from a conservative perspective), Sowell relishes his role as provocateur. Of course, the author's version of truth serves an agenda suggesting that the black community might have been better off before initiatives such as civil rights and affirmative action and that blaming society for the inequities suffered by minorities represents "a long tradition of intellectuals who more or less automatically transform differences into inequities and inequities into the evils or shortcomings of society." Even if blacks have less opportunity than whites, achieve less and commit more crime, he writes, these are not the results of oppression, and they can't be resolved by "a lifestyle of dependency." Instead, "those who lag, for whatever reasons, face a daunting task of bringing themselves up to the rest of society in knowledge, skills and experience--and in the attitudes necessary to acquire this knowledge and these skills and experience." In other words, the problem isn't white racism but black attitudes. The benefit of slavery is but one of the firebombs lobbed within a book that more are likely to find infuriating than enlightening.

Book Details

Published
March 12, 2013
Publisher
Basic Books
Pages
192
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780465058723

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