Race and the Black Male Subculture: The Lives of Toby Waller
Palgrave Macmillan | Ethnicity Studies | June 12 2016 | ISBN-10: 1137590459 | 170 pages | pdf | 2.31 mb
Palgrave Macmillan | Ethnicity Studies | June 12 2016 | ISBN-10: 1137590459 | 170 pages | pdf | 2.31 mb
Authors: Hoston, William T.
An interdisciplinary examination of black masculinity and culture in the 21st century
Critiques the systemic and institutional devaluation of black male lives in American society
Uses the literary figure of Toby Waller as a historical platform to examine racism and oppression
This book is a study of black masculinity in the twenty-first century. Through a series of critical and interdisciplinary essays, this work examines the image of the black male in American society as a Toby Waller stereotype. Toby Waller is the fictional, yet symbolic character from Alex Haley’s highly acclaimed book and mini-series, Roots. It is a richly detailed, fictional story about slavery and one enslaved African man’s struggle to regain freedom. The parallel of the life of enslaved Toby Waller is similar to present day black males. Both are individuals who are often stripped of their cultural identity and exist within an institutional and systemic framework that devalues black male life. This dichotomy is the historical platform to discuss how those in the annals of white America demarcate which embodiment merits inclusion into societal acceptance.
Topics
Ethnicity Studies
Urban Studies/Sociology
Political Sociology
Human Geography
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