The Anti-Civil Rights Movement

UNIVERSITY PRESS OF KANSASISBN: 9780700637140

Affirmative Action As Wedge and Weapon

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By Mike Steve Collins
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF KANSAS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
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Pages:
368

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Description

Mike Steve Collins is professor of English at Texas A&M University and the author of Understanding Etheridge Knight.

Acknowledgments List of Abbreviations Introduction: Hug-gate and Other Hermeneutic Traps Part I: The Last Days of the Civil Rights Era 1. Running Thurgood Ragged 2. The Search for Deep Equality 3. The Rise of Chinese Affirmative Action 4. The Coalition Splits 5. Backlash Inc. 6. Bakke: The Making of a Dagger 7. The Stipulation 8. Certiorari 9. The Contest inside the Court 10. The American Mind after Bakke Part II. Triumph of the Anti-Civil Rights Movement 11. The Equality Matrix 12. Sea Change 13. Reagan Justice 14. Originalism from Strom Thurmond to Edwin Meese 15. World Making, Originalist Style 16. Clint Bolick Goes to War 17. The 10 Percent Solution 18. Proposition 209 19. Enter Edward Blum 20. Conservative Three-Card Monte 21. The Center for Individual Rights versus the University of Michigan 22. The Meaning of 20 Points 23. Shanta Driver Takes on the Anti-Civil Rights Movement 24. Blum Takes Over Conclusion: The Cyclops' Vengeance Notes Index

"The Anti-Civil Rights Movement: Affirmative Action as Wedge and Weapon follows the rise, expansion, and triumph of what Michael S. Collins calls 'the anti-civil rights movement' or, seen from my perspective, the construction of the hegemonic force now overthrowing affirmative action and more broadly endeavoring to outlaw any legal and civil awareness of racism in the United States. Detailing the leaders, foot-soldiers, advocacy groups, and funders, this book shows how the rather nasty sausage has been made behind the scenes and out in the open. Readers who haven't delved into the history will be shocked by the human, informational, and financial resources poured into this retrograde project. But as a scholar who has recounted some of this history, I found myself physically nauseated by the disgusting language used by conservatives to depict Black Americans. Why are we blasted with so much raw hatred on race and now on other issues? What can be done to shift the discourse to compassionate problem-solving?"-Ellen Messer-Davidow, author of The Making of Reverse Discrimination: How DeFunis and Bakke Bleached Racism from Equal Protection

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