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The Silent War

Imperialism and the Changing Perception of Race

Frank Furedi author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Pluto Press

Published:20th Jul '98

Should be back in stock very soon

The Silent War cover

Racial identity has been central to twentieth-century Western imagination. Yet, argues Frank Füredi, advocates of racial identity have long felt uncomfortable with the racialised global order they created.

In The Silent War, Frank Füredi provides a radical exploration of the origins of the Anglo-American race relations industry, arguing that its emergence was driven by a conservative impulse of damage limitation; white racial fears and the internal crisis of confidence of the Anglo-American elites helping to transform racial thinking into a defensive philosophy of race relations. Füredi reveals how this shift in the conceptualisation of race is reflected in the management of international relations and demonstrates how, by the 1940s, Western powers were reluctant to openly use the discourse of race in international affairs.

The Silent War examines the extent of the silent race agenda in the postwar era and helps explain why North–South affairs continue to be influenced by the issue of race.

'Provides a critical account of the changing balance of power between western nations and the Third World since the second world war and the unspoken racial fears of ruling elites over that period ... an unusually candid critique of the 'fashionable' obsession with prejudice' -- Times Higher Education Supplement
'An important work that asks important questions about the struggle for racial equality today, and adds new insights into the history of racial thinking' -- Independent on Sunday

ISBN: 9780745313030

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 320g

288 pages