Mammy Dearest
Richard Bernstein’s new book about Al Jolson and ‘The Jazz Singer’ offers a thoughtful reconsideration of an unfairly reviled cultural landmark.
A collection of 43 posts
Richard Bernstein’s new book about Al Jolson and ‘The Jazz Singer’ offers a thoughtful reconsideration of an unfairly reviled cultural landmark.
Skin colour, genetics, race, and racism.
Trump’s reelection reflects the final exhaustion of the post-World War II liberal and conservative cultural consensuses.
The politicisation of medicine has had terrible unintended consequences.
A tenured scholar has paid a high price for bluntly expressing uncomfortable truths.
A cancelled academic has produced a fine new book about the threat posed by progressive pieties.
Glenn Loury’s startlingly frank confessional memoir offers a complex portrait of a brilliant scholar and a profoundly flawed man.
Directing physicians to treat their patients as racial statistics rather than an individuals is a grievous misdirection of their skills.
This cock-up was not caused by a bug that went unnoticed; it was deliberately engineered.
The accepted view is that the scientists of the European Enlightenment got the issue of race badly wrong. In fact, some of them got more right than they are usually given credit for.
With ‘The End of Race Politics,’ Coleman Hughes enters the ranks of the most mature and sophisticated analysts of the all-American skin game.
Reflecting on "The Case for Black Optimism" by Coleman Hughes
Many leftists claim that black Americans are crushed beneath a vast, racist social machinery. It is hard to imagine a more demoralizing message.
King’s sophisticated understanding of racism bridges two worldviews: that racism is primarily systemic and as well as interpersonal.
Contemporary antiracism imposes an American framework that distorts our understanding of racial issues in different countries.