cover image Between Barack and a Hard Place: Racism and White Denial in the Age of Obama

Between Barack and a Hard Place: Racism and White Denial in the Age of Obama

Tim Wise. City Lights Books, $13.95 (159pp) ISBN 978-0-87286-500-6

Wise, a white anti-racism activist and scholar (and author of White Like Me), pushes plenty of buttons in this methodical breakdown of racism's place in the wake of Barack Obama's victory. In the first of two essays, the author obliterates the canard of the US as a post-racial society; bigotry and insititutionalized discrimination, he contends, have simply morphed into ""Racism 2.0,"" in which successful minorities are celebrated ""as having 'transcended' their blackness in some way."" While racial disparities in employment and income, housing, education and other areas persist, Obama has become an amiable sitcom dad like Bill Cosby, putting whites at ease by speaking, looking and acting ""a certain way""-not to mention avoiding discussion of race. In his second, more incendiary essay, Wise concludes that whites must take responsibility for racism. What the majority of whites fail to grasp, he says, is that they continue to benefit from a system of ""entrenched privileges"" centuries in the making, and that racism remains a serious obstacle for millions of African Americans. There's no sugar coating here for whites, nor are there any news flashes for Americans of color, but Wise bravely enumerates the unpalatable truths of a nation still struggling to understand its legacy of racist oppression.