A review by elly29
Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson

challenging dark informative slow-paced

4.0

Informative. Particularly interesting to read this in parallel Haidt's "The Righteous Mind," which goes over how we developed our groupishness and how we continue to groupish cohesion, among other things. Some of it, as a privileged person living in the dominant caste, was difficult to hear. In particular was the constant comparison to the Southern United States and Nazi Germany; indeed, I did not know that Germany had modeled many of their practices and institutions on the American South. I also am horrified at the details surrounding lynching. For those with weak stomachs, skip that section.

I have a better appreciation for how intrinsic and invested racism is within American society. I think sometimes Wilkerson can be myopic, roundabout in her points, and excessive in her metaphors -- for example, she should've acknowledged earlier that European immigrants, though they themselves might've experienced racism, were able to assimilate after a generation, and she does indeed make the point that that was accomplished through distancing themselves from Black folk. However, her research is thorough, and she brings up many good points and examples about race, class, and caste within the United States. I'm particularly interested in Ambitkar, the Indian equivalent of Martin Luther King, Jr, and in Allison David's and the Gardners' "Deep South," a sociological study of caste while living covertly under it. They were some brave folk.

In terms of the writing, by the time we got to chapters in the twenties, it seemed like it had just become a litany of all the ways in which someone was denied expressing the full measure of their skill and mastery. Which, chapter after chapter, is depressing. The conclusion and epilogue kind of brought it back into analysis and calls to action.

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