Paul C. Taylor

Race


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      The first edition of this book started taking shape in the immediate aftermath of September 11, 2001. Just after the hijacked jetliners did their terrible work, US public discourse resounded with demands for justice, security, and, sometimes, retaliation. These demands led not just to a national discussion about appropriate responses, but also to a rash of vigilante attacks on, as an Associated Press reporter put it, “people who look Middle Eastern and South Asian, whatever their religion or nation of origin …”1 This book is about the kind of thinking – what I’ll call “race-thinking” – that plays a crucial role in picking out the targets for these backlash attacks. It is crucial to the argument of the book to note that this is not the only kind of thing race-thinking does.

      The second edition of the book was the product of a moment of unusually explicit and unusually optimistic public reflections on racial phenomena. Barack Obama had burst upon the world stage, ascended to the presidency of the United States (and won re-election), and established his African American wife and children as the nation’s “first family.” This led many people to think that a new day had dawned with respect to (what Cornel West long ago taught us to call) race matters. These people dared to hope that race had finally lost its influence over human relations, and that the world could enter a new, post-racial age. This book is also a gentle introduction to the kind of thinking about race-thinking – call this “race theory” – that underwrites and, one hopes, illuminates these reflections on the prospects for a post-racial world.

      I’ve used political events to contextualize each edition of this book in order to specify part of the burden that the book carries. To write about race is to take aim at a moving target. Race is a phenomenon that transforms and evolves in relation to a variety of social forces, including the rapid changes of the culture industries. What’s more, it does this out in the open, as it were, not in settings discernible only to scholars or available only under rigidly defined experimental conditions, which is to say that anyone who’s paying attention to the world that most of us experience every day will have some insight into what’s happening.

      For all of these reasons, philosophical studies of race are apt to go stale rather more quickly than philosophy usually does. One way to register this fact and to keep it in view is by using temporal landmarks to orient the project. Another way is to keep an eye out for elements that don’t age well between editions. The Simple Stories that I used as a model for my chapter prologues are a rich resource and suggestive model, as I explain in the introduction. But Langston Hughes’s tone and framing in those stories can be challenging for contemporary readers. I didn’t manage these challenges as well as I might have in the earlier editions of this book. In hopes of doing better this time, I’ve tinkered with both main characters and with the language. Boyd is now a young woman and a daughter of immigrants, Jesse is a little more fully drawn, and the prose style now probably owes as much to Raymond Carver and Amy Hempel as to Hughes.

      Having chosen philosophical engagement with the subject of race over an engagement with the subject of the philosophy of race, I should offer this warning to readers with some experience in this area: this may not be the book for you. If you’re expecting sustained engagements with cutting-edge work as it appears in the pages of professional journals, you will be deeply dissatisfied. If, on the other hand, you’re looking for a user-friendly introduction to the questions that animate that work, with bits of that work making guest appearances along the way, then we should get along just fine.

      1 1. Laurie Goodstein and Tamar Lewin, “A Nation Challenged: Violence and Harassment: Victims of Mistaken Identity, Sikhs Pay a Price for Turbans,” New York Times, September 19, 2001, https://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/19/us/nation-challenged-violence-harassment-victims-mistaken-identity-sikhs-pay-price.html.

      2 2. Ta-Nehisi Coates, “The First White President,” Atlantic, October 2017, https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/10/the-first-white-president-ta-nehisi-coates/537909/.

      A great many people and institutions have made this book possible. I’ll appeal in advance for the forgiveness of the ones I will inevitably forget to mention.

      I developed the perspective worked out in the first edition of this book while teaching social philosophy and race theory courses at Le Moyne College, the University of Kentucky, and the University of Washington in Seattle. Accordingly, I owe a great deal to students at all three schools, and especially to Jennifer Pettit, Noah Purcell, Jasmin Weaver, and Stephanie McNees. Linda Martín Alcoff and Charles Mills gave helpful comments on the original manuscript, and equally helpful encouragement and feedback as I turned the original edition into its successors.

      While working on the second edition, I had the great privilege