


history with which the country is still struggling to come to terms. general defended the teaching of critical race theory in the military during a congressional hearing on the military budget.'Our soldiers, sa. From the Civil War to our combustible present,White Rage reframes our continuing conversation about race, chronicling the powerful forces opposed to black.

Nevertheless, for readers who want to understand the sense of grievance and pain that many African Americans feel today, White Rage offers a clearly written and well-thought-out overview of an aspect of U.S. Anderson writes as a passionate advocate rather than as a dispassionate historian, and at times, she undermines her own credibility, as when she links the genesis of the crack epidemic to Reagan administration efforts to fund the Nicaraguan contras. She looks to the northern states as well, showing how white mobs viciously attacked middle-class black families who tried to buy homes in white neighborhoods. Information about the book, White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide: the Nonfiction, Paperback, by Carol Anderson (Bloomsbury USA, Sep 05. Her book tells the story of Reconstruction and Jim Crow in harrowing terms, using specific incidents of white violence against blacks to personalize the horror. Anderson reminds readers that white rage has a long history in the United States and that it has frequently come in response to black progress. Still Depicts the Making of White American Men’s Rage. In this year of populist backlash, media coverage has often focused on the anger that ordinary white Americans feel over economic and demographic changes they see as threatening. White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide is a 2016 nonfiction book by Emory University Professor Carol Anderson, who was contracted to write the book after reactions to an op-ed that she had written for The Washington Post in 2014.
