A collage showing a 1963 "March on Washington for jobs and freedom" button and part of a book cover with the title "Racecraft" over historic images of people of color

Racecraft

Racecraft

A First-Year Tutorial offered fall 2021, taught by Katya Gibel Mevorach, professor of anthropology and American studies

Required book: Barbara J. Fields and Karen E. Fields. Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life (Verso 2012)

“Racism is first and foremost a social practice […] an action and a rationale for action. Though the concept of race has no genetic or scientific basis, the hierarchical structures we’ve built using this false idea are alive and well, and we’re all complicit in their persistence.” This tutorial considers racism and the alchemy that converts Otherness into profound Difference. We will explore how racial meanings are constructed through a combination of policies and practices with an emphasis on the United States and examples from other countries. Using different types of texts — academic articles, films, comedian acts, music, newspapers and advertisements — we will explore representations of “whiteness,” “blackness,” “Jewishness,” Islam” and other “race-d” “identities” in the public arena as well. Throughout the semester we will interrogate the language, ideas, and assumptions that give meaning to the different ways we perceive the world around us and through which we understand our individual experiences.

Katya Gibel Mevorach

Why I’m Teaching This Topic

I am interested in how we come to know what we know, how we come to see with intent, the associations we make, and the language we use. How do we recognize similarity and difference? How do we see ourselves and others? Our ways of looking, acting, speaking, and thinking are not self-made — they are learned, acquired, internalized, and come to be taken for granted as if they were natural.

– Katya Gibel Mevorach

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