Title Information
Title
In Search of the "Racist White Psyche": Racism and the Psychology of Prejudice in American Social Thought, 1930-1960
Name: Personal
Name Part
Hagel, Jonathan C
Role
Role Term: Text
creator
Origin Information
Copyright Date
2012
Physical Description
Extent
x, 327 p.
digitalOrigin
born digital
Note
Thesis (Ph.D. -- Brown University (2012)
Name: Personal
Name Part
Buhle, Mari
Role
Role Term: Text
Director
Name: Personal
Name Part
Gorn, Elliott
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Personal
Name Part
Campbell, James
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Corporate
Name Part
Brown University. History
Role
Role Term: Text
sponsor
Genre (aat)
theses
Subject
Topic
intellectual history
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1411628")
Topic
History
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1086436")
Topic
Race
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1086616")
Topic
Racism
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1075260")
Topic
Prejudices
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1081447")
Topic
Psychology
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1122877")
Topic
Social sciences
Record Information
Record Content Source (marcorg)
RPB
Record Creation Date (encoding="iso8601")
20121023
Language
Language Term: Code (ISO639-2B)
eng
Language Term: Text
English
Abstract
“In Search of the ‘Racist White Psyche’: Racism and the Psychology of Prejudice in American Social Thought, 1930-1960” traces the efforts of the pioneering generation of American intellectuals and social scientists to understand and combat white racial prejudice. Rejecting long-standing notions that rooted race hatred and conflict in irremediable instincts or drives for racial group preservation, this broad collection of anthropologists, psychologists, historians, and public intellectuals instead constructed new concepts to explain such beliefs and behaviors. Working in response to the Great Depression, the rise of fascism and other racially-inflected social movements in the 1930s, and the Second World War, they sketched out a durable new political fiction—the pathological white racist, possessed of a ‘racist white psyche’—that recast America’s race problems as problems of white racial prejudice. In doing so, they set down many of the key concepts by which Americans would account for white racism in the postwar years, and that remain current down to the present. <br/> <br/> Steeped in new ways of thinking about humanity and human behavior, these intellectuals redefined racial prejudice in terms of culture, history, and psychology. They argued that white racial prejudice formed as the psychological complement of white supremacist social structures; they understood racism as a modern cultural formation akin to mythology; they traced the emotional roots of race prejudice to the universal psychological need for scapegoating; and they identified a particular personality type that developed strong attachments to their prejudices. Taken as a whole, their work made white race prejudice into an individual pathology, a danger to American democracy, and most importantly, a social problem that could be eradicated. At the same time, though, they saw racism as an essentially normal response to the conditions of modern life—a pattern of behavior sanctioned by American culture and called forth by the inequalities of modern capitalist society. Their work set the foundation for how a broad swath of Americans, particularly the growing ranks of those who would attend institutions of higher education and enter the ranks of the professional middle class after the War, came to understand racism.<br/>
Identifier: DOI
10.7301/Z0J101G2
Access Condition: rights statement (href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/")
In Copyright
Access Condition: restriction on access
Collection is open for research.
Type of Resource (primo)
dissertations