"In this important, timely work, Mark Ledwidge, Kevern Verney, and Inderjeet Parmar have pulled together a remarkable collection of essays that examine various aspects of the ways that race continues to matter even after the re-election of the United States first black president. Despite insistence by many that Obamas election ushered in a post-racial society, the essays in this book persuasively document that important work remains to be done in order for the US to reach its goals of liberty and justice for all."
Adia Harvey Wingfield, Georgia State University
"This timely and innovative collection of essays offers trenchant analysis of Obamas election and presidency from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. With issues of race, politics, economics, and foreign policy to the fore, the volumes sharp and at times provocative assessments of Obamas place in US history and political culture reminds us that the domestic and global significance of his election victories and evaluations of his performance in office will be the subject of fierce debate for many years to come. Barack Obama and the Myth of a Post-Racial America is an excellent introduction to that analytical and ideological battleground."
Brian Ward, Northumbria University
"Arising from a powerful collaborative research network, this book provides us with a sobering perspective on the unfolding of the dreams and hopes generated by Obamas election in 2008. It is rich in interdisciplinary perspectives that bring together diverse issues into the most coherent and comprehensive analysis yet of the Obama story so far."
Stephen Burman, University of Sussex
"In this important, timely work, Mark Ledwidge, Kevern Verney, and Inderjeet Parmar have pulled together a remarkable collection of essays that examine various aspects of the ways that race continues to matter even after the re-election of the United States first black president. Despite insistence by many that Obamas election ushered in a post-racial society, the essays in this book persuasively document that important work remains to be done in order for the US to reach its goals of liberty and justice for all." Adia Harvey Wingfield, Georgia State University
"This timely and innovative collection of essays offers trenchant analysis of Obamas election and presidency from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. With issues of race, politics, economics, and foreign policy to the fore, the volumes sharp and at times provocative assessments of Obamas place in US history and political culture reminds us that the domestic and global significance of his election victories and evaluations of his performance in office will be the subject of fierce debate for many years to come. Barack Obama and the Myth of a Post-Racial America is an excellent introduction to that analytical and ideological battleground." Brian Ward, Northumbria University
"Arising from a powerful collaborative research network, this book provides us with a sobering perspective on the unfolding of the dreams and hopes generated by Obamas election in 2008. It is rich in interdisciplinary perspectives that bring together diverse issues into the most coherent and comprehensive analysis yet of the Obama story so far." Stephen Burman, University of Sussex
'The book is firmly anchored in "identity politics" analyses and uses race and its implications for a changing electorate in the US as a framework for analysis... Summing Up: Recommended. All readership levels." L. T. Grover, Southern University and A&M College, CHOICE