Black in America. Christina Jackson
editor of Pathways, Potholes, and the Persistence of Women in Science: Reconsidering the Pipeline (2016), as well as several journal articles and book chapters that explore the historical roots and contemporary underpinnings of inequality.
Christina Jackson is an assistant professor of Sociology at Stockton University in New Jersey. Her research interests are primarily in the intersections of race, class, and gender; social inequality; urban spaces; social movements; and the politics of redevelopment and gentrification. She is the co-author of Embodied Difference: Divergent Bodies in Public Discourse with Jamie A. Thomas (2019), as well as several journal articles and book chapters.
Contributing authors to chapters
Emmanuel Adero is a senior director in the Office of Equity and Inclusion at the University of Massachusetts–Amherst. He has conducted research on race and inequality, Black masculinity, fatherhood, and the family. He has previously served in numerous research and analytical roles related to demography, public policy, and crime analysis.
Lucius Couloute is an assistant professor of Sociology at Suffolk University in Boston, MA. His research interests are in race and racism, class, gender, prisoner re-entry, criminalization, insecure work experiences, and organizations. He has also served as a policy analyst with the Prison Policy Initiative and has authored three policy reports related to the re-entry challenges of formerly incarcerated people.
Candace S. King is a Ph.D. student in the W. E. B. DuBois Department of Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts–Amherst. She is also an Emmy award-winning journalist (2017) for her coverage of the water crisis affecting predominantly Black communities in Flint, Michigan. Her research interests are in formations of Black female identities and misrepresentations in mainstream media.
Introduction: Are We “Post-racial” Yet?
Post-racial. adjective: having overcome or moved beyond racism: having reached a stage or time at which racial prejudice no longer exists or is no longer a major social problem.1
America is far from a post-racial society. Racial inequality is in fact our defining social problem. From rates of mass incarceration to infant mortality, health disparities to unemployment, staggering inequality along racial lines is as American as apple pie, so much so that sociologist Andrew Hacker penned a book in 1995 entitled Two Nations: Black and White, Separate, Hostile, and Unequal.
Yet, despite this stubborn reality, many Americans largely desire to live in a post-racial society. In a 2015 survey conducted by MTV, 91 percent of young people between the ages of 18 and 24 said they believed in racial equality. The vast majority of them (68 percent) said focusing on race “prevents society from becoming colorblind.” Persistent inequality, in their view, is caused by focusing on race too much. The problem, as they see it, is America’s preoccupation with race, so if we ignored it, society would be better off. The questions seem to be: What’s up with race? Why can’t we all just get along?
In The Souls of Black Folk, one of the defining works on the Black experience in America, W. E. B. Du Bois opened with conviction and certainty declaring “the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line” (1903:7). To our great disappointment, he was right. It is a saddening reality that, well into the twenty-first century, Du Bois’ clarion call still rings true. The problem of the color line remains. While the line itself is increasingly variegated as more racial and ethnic groups call America home, Black Americans retain an unwelcome distinction as America’s problem.
Yet, this idea was met with resistance at the start of the twentieth century when Du Bois uttered those words and it still is today. For many, Black success negates this truth. How can the color line be the problem, if evidence of Black progress is all around? At the start of the twenty-first century, words like post-racial and colorblind overtook the American lexicon, drowning out words like racism and discrimination, hiding – if only temporarily – the inconvenience of deep racial disparity. This is the quintessential American paradox, our embrace of the ideals of meritocracy and America as the land of opportunity, despite the systemic racial advantages and disadvantages accrued across generations that have denied this opportunity to Black people. To be Black in America is to exist among a myriad of contradictions: racial progress and regression, abject poverty amidst profound wealth, discriminatory policing yet equal protection under the law. The desire to focus on race less avoids the discomfort of this reality.
Allan G. Johnson in Privilege, Power, and Difference argues difference is not the problem, privilege and power are. In this sense, there is nothing wrong with racial difference itself, but with the way that race is used to structure and organize society. Yet just talking about the reality of racial inequality makes most Americans uncomfortable. Even among young people, who largely believe in racial equality, only 37 percent “were raised in households that talked about race.” Even fewer, 20 percent, “felt comfortable talking about biases against specific groups.” In this vacuum of belief in equality, but avoidance of racial bias as a cause of inequality, racial difference itself becomes the problem. Without discussing the racial privilege that structures American life, simply being Black becomes the problem, not the poverty, marginalization, or racism that scaffolds it.
Racial inequality is a social fact, but how should we understand race itself as contributing to or producing this inequality? The answer depends on one’s conception of race. Race can be defined as an ideology, a manner of thinking, a system of complex ideas about power that justifies who should have it along racial lines (Fields 1990). Or race can be defined as an ideological construct, a shared societal understanding of racial ideologies that manifest materially and socially within society, resulting in differential power along racial lines. Race can also be defined as a sociohistorical construct, developed over hundreds of years, producing a shared global understanding and reinforcement of relationships of domination and subordination along racial lines (Winant 2000a). Finally, race* can be defined as an objective fact: one is simply their race.
Sociologist Howard Winant emphasizes the importance of not treating race as an ideology to be discarded or as an objective fact to be factored into sociological analysis, but instead he argues we must “recognize the importance of historical context and contingency in the framing of racial categories and the social construction of racially defined experiences” (Winant 2000a:185). Yet, Winant notes, “much of liberal and even radical social science, though firmly committed to a social as opposed to a biological interpretation of race, nevertheless also slips into a kind of objectivism about racial identity and racial meaning” (Winant 2000a:184). Hence, sociologist Stephen Steinberg (1998) aptly critiques social science for its role in legitimating the racial hierarchy. Social scientists’ conceptualization of racism in terms of attitudes rather than social conditions led to a focus on White attitudinal change, rather than a focus on changing social conditions. Treatment of racial differences in objective terms without critical attention to the role of racism in creating those differences provides tacit acceptance of the view that race is no longer important, when in actuality its role has been ignored.
This book focuses exclusively on Black Americans to make plain the linkages between the past and the present. It unpacks how race became the basis of inequality historically, and threads together contemporary aspects of inequality. We define Black inclusively (see chapter 2) and explore the contradictions and the heterogeneity of the Black experience in America created by its burgeoning diversity. We engage the prism of differing intersectional social categories, such as ethnicity, gender, and class, which leads to a rich analysis of inequality that exposes how race joins with individuals’ privileges and disadvantages to differently shape the life chances of Black people.
Black in America: Revisiting Martin Luther King Jr.’s Dream
The