Isabel Wilkerson

Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents

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  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    It was in the making of the New World that Europeans became white, Africans black, and everyone else yellow, red, or brown. It was in the making of the New World that humans were set apart on the basis of what they looked like, identified solely in contrast to one another, and ranked to form a caste system based on a new concept called race. It was in the process of ranking that we were all cast into assigned roles to meet the needs of the larger production.
    None of us are ourselves.
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    dominant caste and to distance themselves from the bottom-dwellers, as if everyone were in the grip of an invisible playwright. They learn to conform to the dictates of the ruling caste if they are to prosper in their new land, a shortcut being to contrast themselves with the degraded lowest caste, to use them as the historic foil against which to rise in a harsh, every-man-for-himself economy.
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    Newcomers learn to vie for the good favor of
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    Thus, people who had descended from Africans became the unifying foil in solidifying the caste system, the bar against which all others could measure themselves approvingly.
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    Hostility toward the lowest caste became part of the initiation rite into citizenship in America.
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    Somewhere in the journey, Europeans became something they had never been or needed to be before. They went from being Czech or Hungarian or Polish to white, a political designation that only has meaning when set against something not white.
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    No one was willing,” Baptist wrote, “to admit that they lived in an economy whose bottom gear was torture.”
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    historian Edward Baptist.
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    In 1944, the Swedish social economist Gunnar Myrdal and a team of the most talented researchers in the country produced a 2,800-page, two-volume work that is still considered perhaps the most comprehensive study of race in America, An American Dilemma. Myrdal’s investigation into race led him to the realization that the most accurate term to describe the workings of American society was not race, but caste, that perhaps it was the only term that addresses what seemed a stubbornly fixed ranking of human value.
  • Veronica Rioshas quoted4 years ago
    In 1944, the Swedish social economist Gunnar Myrdal and a team of the most talented researchers in the country produced a 2,800-page, two-volume work that is still considered perhaps the most comprehensive study of race in America, An American Dilemma.
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