Abstract
This essay offers an in-depth look at how some national discussions of race serve to heighten divisions and to distort Americans' understandings of racism. First, I contend that these controversies produce questions that create racial and partisan divisions. In other words, they focus on who or which group is guilty of racism. Second, I argue that such questions about racism depart from the kinds of questions that sociologists seek to answer. As such, racial controversies move the public away from applying a sociological imagination to the problem of racism. © 2014 Eastern Sociological Society.
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CITATION STYLE
Dowd, J. (2014). Public and academic questions on race: The problem with racial controversies. Sociological Forum, 29(2), 496–502. https://doi.org/10.1111/socf.12094
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