Toward a political philosophy of race

technologies and logics of exclusion

English language

Published Nov. 20, 2009 by State University of New York Press.

ISBN:
978-0-7914-9397-7
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (1 review)

1 edition

reviewed Toward a political philosophy of race by Falguni A. Sheth (SUNY series, philosophy and race)

Review of 'Toward a political philosophy of race' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

In “Toward a Political Philosophy of Race” Falguni A. Sheth offers a very interesting framework for thinking about race: as a technology that especially liberal western societies deploy to manage populations that the dominant population perceive as “strange” and therefore threatening which Sheth calls “unruly”. She describes the various ways in which a population is “cut” from the society and how it’s perceived otherness (or “Strangeness” as Sheth elaborates early in the book) is used and exaggerated by treating the actions of a few as representative of the entire group. Sheth elaborates this with the example of how Muslim populations have been marked as sufficiently “strange” in western liberal societies in the late 20th century and how the terrorist attacks on September 11th 2001 in New York City have been used to remove legal protections from those populations.

The book focuses mostly on events and their consequences in the United …

Subjects

  • Race discrimination -- United States
  • Race discrimination -- United States -- Philosophy
  • Racism -- United States
  • United States -- Race relations

Lists