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
Gina Castle Bell is assistant professor at Saint John’s University.
Most educational were the three chapters where Bell defines terms,
describes her study, and explains her theoretical frameworks.
Additionally, her concluding chapter and recommendations for the
future are strong. This book's strength is its explanation of
qualitative research methods and theories for graduate students and
researchers. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate
students/faculty.
*CHOICE*
Brilliantly-written and boldly honest, Talking Black and White is a
refreshing empirical treatment of one of the most painfully intense
social issues of our time. Gina Castle Bell skillfully manages to
cut to the heart of the issue very early in the manuscript as she
makes the provocative declaration, “We have not treated people of
color like they are as valuable as White folks in this nation.”
Then, she clearly articulates and deconstructs the pulp of our
collective possibilities. This book tells us what white privilege
looks like by calling attention to #TrueStory examples, and Bell
offers a path for moving forward. This book will be a must-read for
many years to come!
*Ronald L. Jackson II, University of Cincinnati and editor of
Critical Studies in Media Communication*
In ways that many White scholars are unable and/or unwilling to do,
Dr. Gina Castle Bell reflexively confronts what is at stake amid
real-world Black and White racial dynamics—namely, survival for
many and the humanity of us all. I am impressed by her intellectual
endeavor in Talking Black and White, not because it is perfect but
because she is a White woman setting a high standard for any White
person who claims a socially just sensibility.
*Rachel Alicia Griffin, The University of Utah*
Castle Bell’s monograph offers us an updated glimpse into
black-white race relations in contemporary U.S. culture. Using an
accessible style, and acute analysis, her book provides readers an
opportunity to dialogue about intercultural (mis)communications as
one of the largest issues facing us in the 21st century.
*Kathryn Hobson, James Madison University*
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