File Size: 5143 KB
Print Length: 241 pages
Page Numbers Source ISBN: 080775269X
Publisher: Teachers College Press; Multicultural Education edition (November 1, 2011)
Publication Date: February 5, 2014
Sold by: Digital Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B00IGJWBKO
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
X-Ray: Not Enabled
Word Wise: Enabled
Lending: Not Enabled
Enhanced Typesetting: Enabled
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This is one of the best textbooks currently in existence for an intro to the academic discipline of Social Justice. It is well-put together, easily accessible and makes complex and nuanced arguments clear and understandable to students. However, it is fundamentally flawed in its presentation and foundations. The arguments within the book are never presented as arguments, but as facts that one must accept wholeheartedly and without question. Going so far as to say that even questioning key concepts in the book is a manifestation of racism. The author's underpinning reliance on logical fallacies made me grimace and shudder. Even when I agreed with many of the book's conclusions, I found that most arguments, in summation, are based on nothing more than an appeal to authority. I left this book and the class I took it for with little respect for Social Justice as a legitimate academic discipline that encourages free thought and open debate.
My husband read this book for a class on teaching/learning. His review follows, and now I can't wait t read it!Think this is a great read for anyone. Despite having some concepts that, as a white male in America, may be difficult to swallow, it is a vital scholarly-written book that illustrates the difficulties faced in eliminating oppression, while giving examples of strategies to help facilitate a more just America.
It seems to me that many reviewers here are rating this book not by the quality of the ideas but by the extent to which they agree with them. This a problematic, anti-intellectual way to judge anything. As any critical thinker will agree, the ideas and concepts are well-argued, cogent and supported with facts. To disagree with the authors would be the assume the position of the willfully ignorant, myopic individuals standing so close to the bird cage (page 47) as to only see single bars and ask why doesn't the bird just fly out. Which is to say not fully understand the issues (white privilege, institutional racism, oppression, etc) because you don't have a clear picture. By reading this book, you were supposed to learn how to take a step back, notice how the bars actually make up a cage and gain a clearer, more comprehensive understanding of issues at hand. You missed the point.
The authors of this book assume that racism is rampant in America, whites are the primary cause of prejudice, and continually build arguments through that lens. If you agree and want moral support for your position, you will love this book. If you want to learn multiple viewpoints then I recommend finding a book written by an open-minded author, who avoids deception in building arguments that appear to be logical at first glance. They do it well, so I'm giving it 2 stars based on that alone. A good instructor could find use for this book as one of multiple sources on the subject. If your instructor uses this as their only source, they are probably pushing their own agenda, rather than encouraging open-minded intellectual debate on the topic.
Starts with a section about critical thinking, which is puzzling considering that the authors don't always use critical thinking themselves. This book could have potentially had merit, yet consistently displays massive gaps in logic. Most topics contain inconsistencies and falsehoods, making this a poor "introduction" textbook. A lot of the inaccuracies could've been fixed with a few minutes of research and some exercising of common sense.Trying to 'teach' social justice is dangerous because a lot of people don't know what it is, and many topics are easy to misunderstand. I can't give this book more than 2 stars because the authors are a part of this group that doesn't fully understand the topics outlined in the table of contents. It needs significant rewriting in many areas to give a factual/neutral account of each topic and their intricacies.
The idea that only people who hold power can be sexist or racist comes from Black Supremacists of the 1960's. That in itself is a false and sexist/racist idea. It's a "Supremacist" belief and if it's in a public classroom the publishers should know we'll be contacting the media about it and raising awareness. Racism/sexism is NOT defined by who holds power. It's defined by actions and beliefs. (see attached image)
Ridiculous liberal spew.
It explains concepts pretty good. One thing to improve the book is to help readers find terminology much easier.
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