Used price: $5.75
Used price: $1.99
Collectible price: $24.95
Buy one from zShops for: $21.56
However, as a history of the five ethnic groups it sets out to profile, Beyond the Melting Pot is excellent. It outlines the differing values each group had, plus the niches each group filled. Beyond the Melting pot also avoids misrepresentation by not reducing everything to economics, and admitting that certain groups/cultures really can value (and excel at)different things, something probably offensive to pc'ers.
List price: $15.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $6.00
Buy one from zShops for: $9.93
It takes a few chapters before the book develops its central theme. At this point, it begins to discuss identity, diversity, and the possibility of cooperation and equality. Glazer's argument is that multiculturalism is essentially a black phenomenon, and that it has gained momentum because America has been unable to assimilate blacks in the way that it has done so with European immigrants, Asians, and Hispanics. The reason for this, he maintains, is that blacks have a different history than immigrants, and a reaction to prolonged inequality had to result.
Many people will disagree with Glazer's views. But fortunately for you, it is very evident where he stands, and he is candid in displaying what he believes. Regardless of whether you agree with him, this book contains a good deal of information about the history of multiculturalism that anyone interested can benefit from. Indeed, multiculturalism is here to stay, and we should all know what it's about. Here's one educated point of view that is, if not always agreeable, very temperate and reasonable.
The book is not a critique of multiculturalism because he allows some of the more egregious examples of it's extremes to go without comment, reporting them as if in acceptance of their permanence. Nor is the book an endorsement; his statement that "multiculturalism in education ...has, in a word, won" is a simple remark, presented without enthusiasm or rancor, but with fatalism. This switch from optimism of earlier days to a more pessimistic outlook today, comes through in how surprised he is that "we can disagree on what seems to me to be simple truths," and in the emergence of "a hard institutionalization of differences." It's unfortunate that Mr Glazer focused on the signs and symptoms of multicultural malaise in his early chapters because it obscures his most profound point. One that although unpleasant, is a truth, and if widely accepted as a starting point, would go a long way to soften some of those hard positions and allow debate to return in place of vitriol. Glazer, on the African-American condition says "where the community of descent defines an inescapable community of fate, where knowledge and moral values are indeed grounded in blood and history...[multiculturalism]...is the price America is paying for it's inability or unwillingness to incorporate into it's society African-Americans, in the same way and to the same degree it has incorporated so many groups." A great synopsis of what Orlando Patterson calls 'the Ordeal of Integration'. If this recognition is all that multiculturalism demands at it's most basic level then we do not have to cater to it's extremes. There are in fact encouraging signs that many students of the subject are demanding mid-course corrections. I think that Mr Glazer's book is needlessly pessimistic and that there will emerge, again, a proper discourse on the subject. Sane, rational and compassionate voices such as his are still very much in need and it would be a shame if years 'in the trenches' were to take it's toll and quieten him.
List price: $17.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $0.94
Collectible price: $2.99
Buy one from zShops for: $8.50
To his credit, Riesman bends over backwards to say that people can belong to all categories at once through various manifestations of their characters. Nevertheless, the categories are so simple, and feel so descriptively true, that the tendency to believe in the categories and Riesman's historical sketch of how each comes about almost our overwhelms skepticism. Almost. But as Todd Gitlin points out in the foreward, Riesman's theories are tied to a population theory (other-directed societies could supposedly be distinguished by their lower birth rates in combination with economic prosperity) that was almost immediately overturned by the baby boom in the years immediately following the publication of the book. Riesman himself in the reprint of his introduction from a previous edition points out the flaw in the population projection, recanting this part of his theory. And although the flaw is minor in the sense of the meat of the book -- psychologizing various populations at certain stages in their economic development, it does began after awhile to discredit even the psychologizing. For so tightly does he link the other-directed to a phenomenon which is almost immediately proved wrong, that it calls into question everything else he contends. Remember the book "The Population Bomb" which predicted in the 60s that world would soon be overrun with humanity? It didn't take into consideration famine, disease, war -- the usual plagues of humanity. There is nothing so humbling as building a theory on bad demographic predictions.
Whether or not the theories about social character are true, they were extraordinarily influential at the time, shaping ideas about the American character and American society that persist fifty years later. There are parts of this book -- most of it in fact -- that feels vital and true to this day. The question is, however, is this because the ideas contained herein have become so dissolved into the cultural discourse that they have become true in the retelling, or are they literally true for their time and so remain?
That's part of the fun of reading this old chestnut -- deciding for yourself!
Used price: $7.00
Unfortunately, Rooney doesn't critically examine anything the SBC people say to him. He presents their opinion, and their own descriptions of their strategies and their results, as fact. It would be more interesting if he were able to evaluate what the group accomplished in comparison to other groups, or in comparison to the goals they set for themselves.
But if one recognizes this fault, one can read much of the history of this significant Bronx organization in these pages.
And I have to say this -- either the author or the publisher should have used a spell-checker on this book.
Used price: $17.05
Buy one from zShops for: $27.80
Used price: $33.87
Used price: $2.88
Collectible price: $9.53
Used price: $2.50
Used price: $6.50