scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Howard Winant published in 2002"


Book ChapterDOI
01 May 2002-Souls
TL;DR: The authors argue that race defines and organizes the world and its future, as it has done for centuries, and that the future of democracy itself depends on the outcomes of racial politics and policies as they develop in various national societies and in the world at large.
Abstract: As THE WORLD LURCHES FORWARD INTO THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY, there is widespread confusion and anxiety about the political significance, and even the meaning, of race. In this chapter I argue that, far from becoming less politically central, race defines and organizes the world and its future, as it has done for centuries. I challenge the idea that the world, as reflected by the national societies I compare, is moving “beyond race.” I suggest that the future of democracy itself depends on the outcomes of racial politics and policies as they develop in various national societies and in the world at large. This means that the future of democracy also depends on the concept of race, that is, the meaning that is attached to it. Contemporary threats to human rights and social well-being—including the resurgent dangers of fascism, increasing impoverishment, and massive social polarization—cannot be managed or even understood without paying new and better attention to issues of race. This chapter attempts to provide a set of conceptual tools that can facilitate this task.

22 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Howard Winant1
TL;DR: In this article, the central poles of comparative attention are the U.S. and Brazilian censuses, but Nobles also comments on a range of other national processes of census-taking and systems of racial classification employed; Germany and South Africa as well as other Latin American, African and European countries are mentioned.
Abstract: A thoughtful book on a subject that can be quite vexing, Shades of Citizenship benefits greatly from the comparative analytical framework employed. The central poles of comparative attention are the U.S. and Brazilian censuses, but Nobles also comments on a range of other national processes of census-taking and systems of racial classification employed; Germany and South Africa as well as other Latin American, African, and European countries are mentioned.

5 citations