Tim Wise, whom scholar and philosopher Cornel West calls, "A vanilla brother in the tradition of (abolitionist) John Brown," is among the nation's most prominent antiracist essayists and educators. He has spent the past 25 years speaking to audiences throughout North America, on over 1000 college and high school campuses, at hundreds of conferences, and to community groups across the nation about methods for dismantling racism.
Wise's antiracism work traces back to his days as a college activist in the 1980s, fighting for divestment from (and economic sanctions against) apartheid South Africa. After graduation, he threw himself into social justice efforts full-time, as a Youth Coordinator and Associate Director of the Louisiana Coalition Against Racism and Nazism: the largest of the many groups organized in the early 1990s to defeat the political candidacies of white supremacist and former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke. From there, he became a community organizer in New Orleans' public housing, and a policy analyst for a children's advocacy group focused on combatting poverty and economic inequity. He has served as an adjunct professor at the Smith College School of Social Work, in Northampton, MA., and from 1999-2003 was an advisor to the Fisk University Race Relations Institute in Nashville, TN.
Wise is the author of seven previous books, including Dear White America: Letter to a New Minority, Under the Affluence: Shaming the Poor, Praising the Rich and Sacrificing the Future of America and has been featured in several documentaries, including "The Great White Hoax: Donald Trump and the Politics of Race and Class in America," and "White Like Me: Race, Racism and White Privilege in America." Wise is one of five persons-including President Barack Obama-interviewed for a video exhibition on race relations in America, featured at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC.
His media presence includes dozens of appearances on CNN, MSNBC and NPR, feature interviews on ABC's 20/20 and CBS's 48 Hours, as well as videos posted on YouTube, Facebook and other social media platforms that have received over 20 million views. His podcast, "Speak Out with Tim Wise," features bi-weekly interviews with activists, scholars and artists about movement building and strategies for social change.
Table of Contents
Preface: Racism and Inequality in Pandemic Times
Introduction: America's Longest War
1. Post-Racial Blues: Race and Reality in the Obama Years
Good, Now Back to Work: The meaning (and limits) of the Obama victory
Denial is a River Wider than the Charles: Implicit bias and the burden of blackness in the age of
Harpooning the Great White Wail: Reflections on racism and right-wing buffoonery
Imagine for a Moment: Protest, privilege, and the power of whiteness
If it Walks Like a Duck and Talks Like a Duck:Racism and the death of respectable conservatism
Bullying Pulpit: The problematic politics of personal responsibility
No Innocence Left to Kill: Trayvon Martin, George Zimmerman, and coming of age in an unjust nation
Killing One Monster, Unleashing Another: Reflections on revenge and revelry in America
You Will Know Them by the Eyes of Their Whites: Ferguson and white denial
2. Trumpism and the Politics of Prejudice
Trump Card: Reflections on racism and the art of the heel
Discovering the Light in Darkness: Donald Trump and the future of America
Reeking City on a Dung Heap: The dangerous worldview of Donald Trump
Patriotism Is for Black People: Colin Kaepernick and the politics of protest
If It's a Civil War, Pick a Side: Charlottesville and the meaning of Trumpism
Making a Murderer (Politically Profitable): Immigration and hysteria in Trumplandia
Racist Is too Mild a Term: The President is a white nationalist
The Face of American Terrorism Is White
America Is an Idea (and It's the Right that Hates It)
Pandemic-ing While White: Privilege, protest and identity in lockdown America
Trumpism vs. America: What 2020 is really about
3. Confronting White Denial, Deflection, and Fragility
White Denial Is as American as Apple Pie
Colorblindness and the Coronavirus
Weaponizing Appalachia: Race, class and the art of white deflection
Chicago Is Not a Punch Line (or an Alibi): White deflection and black-on-black crime
Identity Politics Are Not the Problem, Identity-Based Oppression Is
Farrakhan Is Not the Problem: Exploring the appeal of white America's bogeyman
You May Not Be Racist but Your Ideology Is: Why modern conservatism is racist
Who's the Snowflake Now? White fragility in a time of turmoil
Race, Class, Violence, and Denial: Mass murder and the pathology of privilege
Injustice Is Not a Glitch, It's a Feature: Understanding the depth of the problem
4. Mis-Remember When: Race and American Amnesia
Dream Interrupted: The sanitizing of Martin Luther King Jr.
Holocaust Denial, American-Style
When Innocence Is the Crime:
Race, rebellion and violence in the white mind
No Shit Snowden: NSA spying and the privilege of white memory
History, Memory, and the Implicit Racism of Right-Wing Moralizing
Europe Didn't Send Their Best Either: Immigration and the lies we tell
Racism Is Evil but Not Un-American
MAGA Is a Slur and Your Hat Is Hateful
5. Armed With a Loaded Footnote: Debunking the Right
Cheap White Whine: Debunking reverse discrimination and white victimhood
Rationalizing Unequal Policing: Exposing the right's war on justice
Hey Conservatives, Facts Don't Care About Your Feelings Either: Debunking the lie of welfare dependence
Baby Mama Drama: Debunking the Black Out-of-Wedlock Birth Rate Crisis
Con-Fusion Ethics and Deceptive Data: The war on affirmative actio
Debunking the Model Minority Myth: Asian Americans as pawns in a white game
Intelligence and Its Discontents: Debunking IQ and the absurdity of race science
Nazis Make Lousy Researchers: Debunking the myth of Jewish power
6. Where Do We Go From Here?
Voting Is a Tactic, Your Bumper Sticker Is Not
It's Not the1960s Anymore (and Perhaps it Never Was): The lessons and limits of progressive nostalgia
With Friends Like These, Who Needs Enemies? Privilege and denial on the left
Not Ready to Make Nice: The fallacy of outreach and understanding
Checking Privilege (While Not Being an Asshole)
Taking Personal Responsibility Seriously: Rejecting white saviorism and embracing allyship
Forget STEM, We Need MESH: Civics education and the future of America
Our Fear is Real but it's Far from Unique: Empathy in a time of pandemic
Americanism is a Pandemic's BFF: Rethinking our values in a time of crisis
Hope Is a Noun, Justice Is a Verb, and Nouns are Not Enough
About the Author