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Book
Toxic Diversity: Race, Gender and Law Talk in America
(2005)
  • Dan Subotnik
Abstract

Toxic Diversity offers an invigorating view of race, gender, and law in America. Analyzing the work of preeminent legal scholars such as Patricia Williams, Derrick Bell, Lani Guinier, and Richard Delgado, Dan Subotnik argues that race and gender theorists poison our social and intellectual environment by almost deliberately misinterpreting racial interaction and data and turning white males into victimizers. Far from energizing women and minorities, Subotnik concludes, theorists divert their energies from implementing America's social justice agenda.

Insisting, in the words of James Baldwin, that “not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced,” and that thoughtful Americans regardless of race and gender can handle frank conversations about difficult topics, Subotnik’s critique of race and gender theory pulls no punches as it confronts such inflammatory issues as single parenthood, the merit system in academic and business settings, gender privilege in the classroom, and crime.

Keywords
  • race,
  • gender,
  • law talk,
  • Subotnik,
  • Dan Subotnik
Publication Date
2005
Publisher
New York University Press
Citation Information
Dan Subotnik. Toxic Diversity: Race, Gender and Law Talk in America. New York: New York University Press, 2005.