'...a concise and insightful commentary in the debate regarding nurture versus nature and the impact on intelligence.' - Booklist
'Racism is the longest lasting, most devastating chronic disease affecting Americans today. It has proven to be resistant to science, and to religion. In this elegant book Alex Alland explains the peculiar persistence of racism, and offers his own novel prescriptions for its eradication.' - Robert Pollack, Ph.D., Professor of Biological Sciences and Director of the Center for the Study of Science and Religion, Columbia University
'His thorough overview and his message...are valuable...' - V.J. Baker, Choice
'Racism is the longest lasting, most devastating chronic disease affecting
Americans today. It has proven to be resistant to science, and to religion. In this elegant book Alex Alland explains the peculiar persistance of racism, and offers is own novel prescriptions for its eradication.' - Robert Pollack, Ph.D., Professor of Biological Sciences and Director of the Center for the Study of Science and Religion, Columbia University, USA.
'It is salutary to be reminded, as we are in this book, of the horrors that have been committed in the name of misbegotten notions of race - which, in various forms, are very much alive today. from a broad anthropological viewpoint, Alex Alland provides us with a readable, closely argued, and convincing demolition of some of the more insidious recent incarnations of racism.' - Ian Tattersall, author of The Monkey in the Mirror: Essays on the Science of What Makes Us Human
'Professor Alland's book makes current work in sociobiology and evolutionary psychology accessible to non-specialists, including general as well as academic audiences. In clear, straightforward language, he moves comfortably between the pseudoscience of scientific racism and the moral responsibilities entailed by the more humanistic disciplines. The argument is firmly grounded in cultural as well as biological anthropology, moving from race (as a spurious biological category) to racism as a social construction. Each generation seems to face a resurgence of scientific racism against which resistance must be mounted. Professor Alland indeed has an axe to grind about the dangers of seeing race in mind as merely research, without human consequences - and he grinds it well. - Regna Darnell, Professor of Anthropology, University of Western Ontario, Canada
'...a concise and insightful commentary in the debate regarding nurture versus nature and the impact on intelligence.' - Booklist