How can we enlarge the freedom and enhance the life prospects of African Americans when so many people are convinced that racism is no longer a serious problem? Derrick Darby answers this urgent question with an enlightening blend of philosophical argument and empirical evidence. He not only offers a practical and powerful response to the enduring significance of racism in the United States but also forcefully challenges progressive thinkers and activists to reconsider their usual policy proposals and strategies of resistance. An essential contribution to Black philosophy.
Tommie Shelby, author of Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform
The number of problems confronting African Americans is truly quite daunting to think about. It stretches across politics/public policy, economics, law, sociology, health (mental and physical; diagnosis and treatment). Drawing on decades worth of thought, Derrick Darby masterfully and carefully offers us a way out, a way forward as well as an idea of what the world would look like when we arrive at the end. This is an amazing book but it's so much more: it's a museum/prison of thoughts gone by, it's a prism/kaleidoscope of perspective and vision, it's a map to places as yet unexplored, and (perhaps most importantly) it's a ticket to ride - together.
Christian Davenport, author of The Death and Life of State Repression
Derrick Darby offers an innovative approach to achieving social justice in the face of America's deep divisions on race. Combining the disciplined analysis of philosophy with a hard-edged realism about our current moment, Darby recognizes that race-centered approaches cannot, standing alone, overcome the psychological, sociological, and structural barriers that foster ongoing racial disparities across multiple measures of well-being. Bringing together a number of themes reflected in his prior work, A Realistic Blacktopia argues for problem-centered solutions to social injustice that can appeal to supporters across the racial divide. It places Darby among the preeminent American scholars on the subject of racial justice.
Richard E. Levy, J.B. Smith Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Kansas School of Law
How is it possible to improve the material conditions of the poor in the United States, whose number is disproportionately black? How is it possible to treat every citizen as deserving of dignity, including black citizens vulnerable to gerrymandering, disenfranchisement, and vote dilution? In A Realistic Blacktopia, Derrick Darby makes a compelling argument that improving the condition of black citizens requires forging alliances among marginalized communities.
Nicholas Tampio, Fordham University, Bronx, NY 10458, USA, Contemporary Political Theory
This book will definitely have readers shifting their lens a bit wider when considering racial inequality in America.
Thorayya Said Giovannelli, PsyD