Color of Culture - by Daniel H Krymkowski (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Daniel H. Krymkowski documents the extent and causes of African American underrepresentation in the cultural realms of golf, hiking, hunting and fishing, water and winter sports, classical music, art, ballet, and theater.
- About the Author: Daniel H. Krymkowski is professor of sociology at the University of Vermont in Burlington.
- 206 Pages
- Social Science, Ethnic Studies
Description
About the Book
Daniel H. Krymkowski documents the extent and causes of African American underrepresentation in the cultural realms of golf, hiking, hunting and fishing, water and winter sports, classical music, art, ballet, and theater. He argues racial-ethnic inequality in these areas is ex...Book Synopsis
Daniel H. Krymkowski documents the extent and causes of African American underrepresentation in the cultural realms of golf, hiking, hunting and fishing, water and winter sports, classical music, art, ballet, and theater. He argues racial-ethnic inequality in these areas is extensive and results mainly from historic and contemporary discrimination.
Review Quotes
A timely book, Krymkowski empirically takes to task the exclusion and limited participation of African Americans in many pastimes of the American cultural landscape. Using a mixed-methods approach, he painstakingly examines the spaces in which whites have thoroughly enjoyed, and in which whites have reaped much cultural approbation. These white spaces include golf, hiking, water sports, classical music, painting and more--9 areas in total, areas in which African Americans continue to be denied full access to their benefits and rewards. The book is a must read for anyone still not convinced that racism matters, or those who want a sociological understanding of how the social rights of African Americans continue to be denied some fifty-five plus years after the Civil Rights Movement. It's a must read for any serious racism scholar.
The Color of Culture is a gem! Using historical, qualitative, and quantitative data, Krymkowski demonstrates that Whites control important cultural activities such as golf, hiking, museums, skiing, hunting and fishing, and the like. In a parsimonious yet highly readable manner, he shows racism's central role in this cultural segregation. This is one of those rare books that can be assigned for undergraduate as well as graduate classes. Bravo!
This is a book for anyone interested in race and racism, the ways that white spaces function, Black engagement in a variety of cultural fields, and the myriad initiatives that are taking place in our society to change the realities laid bare in this book. The Color of Culture will be quite useful for courses in inequality, sport, culture, race and ethnicity, and others across sociology, American studies, anthropology, social psychology, and social problems courses, to name a few. Indeed, it comes at a time of significant systemic reckoning with the exclusionary structures and white sanctuaries that produce the effects we see in this book.
About the Author
Daniel H. Krymkowski is professor of sociology at the University of Vermont in Burlington.