The Social Transmission of Racism

14 Pages Posted: 17 Apr 2016

See all articles by Lisa Chiyemi Ikemoto

Lisa Chiyemi Ikemoto

University of California, Davis - School of Law

Date Written: April 13, 2016

Abstract

This essay reviews two books, Robert Wald Sussman, The Myth of Race: The Troubling Persistence of an Unscientific Idea (Harvard University Press 2014) and Osagie K. Obasogie, Blinded by Sight: Seeing Race Through the Eyes of the Blind (Stanford University Press 2014). Sussman is an anthropologist who brings his expertise to bear in tracing scientific racism through history. Obasogie is a legal scholar and sociologist who uses both qualitative data gathered through interviews with blind and sighted people and Critical Race Theory to explore racialization’s dependence on the idea that race is visually obvious. Each book examines an idea that has sustained racism despite social, political and geographic change. The essay assesses each account and links the authors’ analyses to judicial and legislative framings of reproductive rights and to postmodernist scholarship on race, gender and the human body.

Suggested Citation

Ikemoto, Lisa Chiyemi, The Social Transmission of Racism (April 13, 2016). Tulsa Law Review, Vol. 51, 2016, UC Davis Legal Studies Research Paper No. 489, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2764597

Lisa Chiyemi Ikemoto (Contact Author)

University of California, Davis - School of Law ( email )

Martin Luther King, Jr. Hall
Davis, CA CA 95616-5201
United States

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