White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism

· Penguin · Narrated by Amy Landon
3.1
23 reviews
Audiobook
6 hr 20 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

Penguin presents the audiobook edition of White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo.

Anger. Fear. Guilt. Denial. Silence. These are the ways in which ordinary white people react when it is pointed out to them that they have done or said something that has - unintentionally - caused racial offence or hurt. After, all, a racist is the worst thing a person can be, right? But these reactions only serve to silence people of colour, who cannot give honest feedback to 'liberal' white people lest they provoke a dangerous emotional reaction.

Robin DiAngelo coined the term 'White Fragility' in 2011 to describe this process and is here to show us how it serves to uphold the system of white supremacy. Using knowledge and insight gained over decades of running racial awareness workshops and working on this idea as a Professor of Whiteness Studies, she shows us how we can start having more honest conversations, listen to each other better and react to feedback with grace and humility. It is not enough to simply hold abstract progressive views and condemn the obvious racists on social media - change starts with us all at a practical, granular level, and it is time for all white people to take responsibility for relinquishing their own racial supremacy.

'With clarity and compassion, DiAngelo allows us to understand racism as a practice not restricted to "bad people." In doing so, she moves our national discussions forward. This is a necessary book for all people invested in societal change' Claudia Rankine

'By turns mordant and then inspirational, an argument that powerful forces and tragic histories stack the deck fully against racial justice alongside one that we need only to be clearer, try harder, and do better' David Roediger, Los Angeles Review of Books

'The value in White Fragility lies in its methodical, irrefutable exposure of racism in thought and action, and its call for humility and vigilance' Katy Waldman, New Yorker

'A vital, necessary, and beautiful book' Michael Eric Dyson

Ratings and reviews

3.1
23 reviews
William Robinson
October 23, 2020
This book is a disgusting slu of racist gibberish. The white race is compared to the devil and generalised as racist (a view that is ironically racist by definition). The white author also paints black people as in a state of collective victimhood and really dehumanizes them by denying both them and whites individuality. The book also has glaring double standards, praising the civil rights movement for fighting for black rights yet saying any form of "white solidarity" is racist regardless of context. All of this is built on her own definition of racism as institutional dispite the fact that institutionality is in no way a prerequisite for racial hatred. She essentially justifies her bigotry by playing a childish word game where "racism" is an abstract metaphysical force that exists as a byproduct of white people existing and anyone who disagrees is a "white supremacist". Don't buy this book, it's the most disgusting example of bigotry and racial generalisations since mein kempf.
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Jason Daniel
July 9, 2020
If you don't like it youre racist? Really? I'm middle Eastern and I was born and lived in Africa... I don't like it, am I racist? The reviewers that say this are the problem.
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Mike Shipway
July 3, 2020
If you genuinely wish to understand what is meant by white fragility, this is the most powerful book. It is an eye opener. I suspect it'll only be read by people who want to be enlightened and have already started their journey. It is certainly one of the most powerful books that I've read this millennium. It's tough. It's uncompromising. It takes no prisoners. And it takes courage to accept and understand. But what it does best, which makes it magic, is that it liberates you. I dare you to read it and not be changed by it for the better.
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About the author

Robin DiAngelo is an academic, lecturer, and author working in the fields of critical discourse analysis and whiteness studies. She is a lecturer at the University of Washington and formerly served as a tenured professor of multicultural education at Westfield State University. DiAngelo has been a consultant and trainer for more than twenty years on issues of racial and social justice.

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