Talking black and white : an intercultural exploration of twenty-first-century racism, prejudice, and perception

Author(s)

    • Bell, Gina Castle
    • Hopson, Mark C.

Bibliographic Information

Talking black and white : an intercultural exploration of twenty-first-century racism, prejudice, and perception

Gina Castle Bell ; forewors by Mark C. Hopson

Lexington Books, c2017

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 129-134) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Talking Black and White: An Intercultural Exploration of Twenty-First-Century Racism, Prejudice, and Perception investigates domestic race-related social justice issues and intercultural communication between Black and White individuals. Twenty-first-century racism, racial tensions, prejudice, police brutality, #BLM, misperception, and the role of the past are deconstructed in an engaging, provocative, and accessible manner. Gina Castle Bell explores these dynamics through the lenses of intercultural communication, critical intercultural communication, critical race theory, critical theory, rhetoric, sociology, race and racism, interracial communication, Black communication, identity, identity negotiation, and communication theory. This is an ideal book for scholars, students, and working professionals who are interested in intercultural communication, race relations, and healthy communication across various areas of difference.

Table of Contents

Contents Dedication Acknowledgments Foreword: "The More Things Change..." Mark C. Hopson Introduction: On Black and White Race Relations Chapter 1-First Things First: Disclosing My Positionality Chapter 2-Defining Key Terms: Discussing the Past Chapter 3-Study Description: Methodology and Methods Chapter 4-Guiding Theoretical Frameworks: Co-Cultural Theory & Cultural Contracts Theory Chapter 5-Black Folks, Police Officers, & the Perception Problem Chapter 6-On Prejudice, the Perils of this Generation, and Why Black Lives Matter Chapter 7-On Stuff White Folks said they "Don't Like about Black Folks" Chapter 8-Moving Forward Together: On Why "I [Still] Have a Dream" References About the Author

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