An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy, Volume 2Harper, 1944 - 1483 páginas This book tackled the stark contradiction between America's ideal of equality and the realities of racism against African-Americans, as well as other oppressed groups. In it, Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal argued that rampant discrimination not only negated America's founding principles, but also diminished its productivity and advancement. Cited in the landmark segregation case Brown v. Board of Education, the book greatly influenced perspectives on race relations and helped form the foundation for the civil rights movement. |
Índice
Foreword by Frederick P Keppel Authors Preface Introduction 1 The Negro Problem as a Moral Issue | xlv |
Valuations and Beliefs | xlvii |
A White Mans Problem | li |
Direitos de autor | |
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An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy, Volume 2 Gunnar Myrdal,Richard Sterner,Arnold Marshall Rose Visualização de excertos - 1944 |
An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy, Volume 2 Gunnar Myrdal,Richard Sterner,Arnold Marshall Rose Visualização de excertos - 1944 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
actually agricultural American Creed American Negro attitude average become beliefs caste cent Chapter Civil color conservatism Constitution courts cultural democratic economic effect employment equality fact factors families farm federal feel important income increase individual industry interest interracial James Weldon Johnson less liberal lower class lynching masses migration miscegenation moral movement mulattoes Negro community Negro leaders Negro population Negro problem Negro vote Negro workers Negro world Negroes and whites nigger North Northern cities number of Negro observed organizations particularly political poll tax popular practically proportion of Negroes race racial reason region relations rural Section segregation situation slavery slaves social social equality society South Southern Negroes Southern whites status tenants tion trade unions tradition trend unions usually valuations value premises W. E. B. Du Bois white Americans white Southerners white workers whites and Negroes