Elijah Anderson is the Sterling Professor of Sociology and of African American Studies at Yale University. His past books include A Place on the Corner, Streetwise, both also published by the University of Chicago Press, as well as Code of the Street and The Cosmopolitan Canopy
Penetrating ethnographic study. . . . [A] fine-grained portrait of how systemic racism operates. * Publishers Weekly * His points are solid and worthy of further discussion. * Kirkus * With creative concepts and phrases, Anderson builds on his previous ethnographic research to illuminate racial reactions in settings of recurrent intergroup contact. Black in White Space is a captivating book that is a must-read for anyone seeking a lucid discussion of American race relations. * William Julius Wilson, Harvard University * Black in White Space is an elegantly composed, brilliant, and intimate look at how Black people are seen in and navigate through predominantly white spaces. This will be an extremely useful text-particularly as we grapple with what diversity means in its substance as an aspiration. * Imani Perry, Princeton University * Explains how not just urban ghetto Blacks, but successful Blacks living elsewhere, share the need to manage the enduring stigma of being treated as inferiors. This is not Ralph Ellison's 'Invisible Man' but the hypervisible Black person. * Mary Frances Berry, University of Pennsylvania * Rich in ethnographic detail and anchored in historical and sociological perspective, Black in White Space brilliantly informs us about the personal and social consequences of living in a society still stratified by racial inequality. * Margaret L. Andersen, author of Getting Smart about Race: An American Conversation * Anderson's crowning masterpiece, Black in White Space is an incisive analysis of the iconic ghetto that illuminates the reality of white racism from police murders to everyday acts of disrespect. * Fred Block, University of California, Davis * With elegant prose, deep ethnography, and incisive theorizing, these essays demonstrate why Anderson is one of America's 'wise men.' Black in White Space piercingly illuminates not only the chasm but also the crevasses that divide racial understandings in the United States. * Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University * Once again, Anderson demonstrates his clear mastery of the issue of race in America. This book is his gift to all of us who yearn for a nation of equality. * The Honorable Rev. Dr. W. Wilson Goode, Sr., Former Mayor, City of Philadelphia * Anderson is the Erving Goffman of race relations. He reveals the human realities behind the statistics and the everyday life behind the headlines. * Randall Collins, author of Charisma: Micro-sociology of Power and Influence * Black inWhite Space is a searing ethnographic depiction of everyday life in America. Anderson's work has redefined sociology, especially our understanding of race and the history of anti-Blackness. Anderson explains what it means to be Black in America at this moment in history, offering powerful insights into the ways economic deprivation, anti-Black racism, and social marginalization shape the Black American experience. Employing thick, theoretically informed ethnographic methods, he guides the reader through the modern legacies of slavery, racial caste, racial segregation, deindustrialization, and race relations in America. The result is a book about who we are as Americans and what time it is as we change demographically. In short, Black in White Space is nothing less than an ethnographic portrait of America. * Waverly Duck, author of 'Tacit Racism' *