The acclaimed work that debunks our myths and false assumptions about race in America
Maurice Berger grew up hypersensitized to race in the charged environment of New York City in the sixties. His father was a Jewish liberal who worshiped Martin Luther King, Jr.; his mother a dark-skinned Sephardic Jew who hated black people. Berger himself was one of the few white kids in his Lower East Side housing project. Berger's unusual experience--and...
This deeply personal book is beautifully written and one of the most insightful books I have ever read about race. Berger has done a remarkable thing, writing about a subject that often generates a lot of heat but little light with an emotional connection that is as moving as it is smart and refreshing. At a time when America is more divided by race than ever, this book should be required reading for every American.
One drop of blood is worth $50 Million
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
Maurice Berger book is unusual for several reasons. One is that although he is classified as belonging to a "successful" ethnic group that is Jewish. He and his sister encounter virulent rejection from this group. Because of their poverty and down at heel address. (they reside in the projects) and are therefore assumed by their Jewish teachers to be "educationally retarded" Maurice Berger knows what it is like to be on the receiving end of prejudice and how nebulous ethnic definitions truly are. His story is a remarkable one because of the jarring polarity of his parent's stance on race. His mother's panic stricken complexion concealing beauty routine. Did not shock me at all because I know that many of the nuances surrounding racial superiority have their basis in physical aesthetics. Berger rips off the cultural façade by including anecdotes that indicate being born of obvious African decent implies being born physically repellent and socially tarnished in the eyes of whites. He includes the Dictionary definition for "black" and its metaphors comparing it to "white." So that it is made clear that being called "black" is the same as being called "blemished" "dirty" and "unlucky" but white is "pure" "unblemished" and "good." Mr. Berger dismisses American whiteness proclamations of "racial purity" as genetically bogus when he states that white Americans have between 5-20 % African ancestry running through their veins. By this he indicates that he recognizes that whiteness is a social construction hence the "white lies" of the title. For the social and economic privilege derived from being classified as 'whites' many deny their true ancestry Mr. Berger rightly sees the classification of races as a form of social restraint stemming from economic and political competition. He also believes that most whites know this but won't admit it. He gives an example of homeowners being asked to answer some racial questions after declaring that "allowing blacks into their neighborhood would drag down the property value of their homes" They were each informed that instead of race being determined by fate it would instead be allocated in quotas by the government. They are told that they have been wrongly made whites and will now be made blacks but they have an offer of compensation. How much do they think their "loss" of their racial grouping is worth ? One man said "50 million so that he could live anywhere free from prejudice" another simply stated "that he would NEVER give up his race" Previously they had all been on the defensive declaring themselves non racists. Whilst insisting that blacks imagined slights and racism where there was none to be found. But their own replies belied this assertion making it clear that being born white was so socially advantages and economically valuable in America. That like the art in the Vatican. It was basically priceless. I found the reflections on his father more intriguing th
I was skeptical at first, now I'm Impressed
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I decided to buy WHITE LIES after reading a number of really good reviews of it (notwithstanding the weird Kirkus review above that seems to have little to do with the actual book). At first I was skeptical. Just another book, by a white guy no less, on race. Just another guilt trip, I thought. As I started to read the book, I began questioning many of my assumptions and attitudes about race. The book took me on a journey, a journey through fragments of feelings, and ideas, and memoir that I could relate to and that really made me rethink every attitude I have about race, about black people, about my personal relationships with the people I live and work with. This journey was not always easy. Berger's writing can be demanding and even disturbing; but it is also elegant.This book is not just another white guy's self-rightious argument about race. It is gentle call to self-examination that is truly worth reading and pondering.
An eye opening view on the insidious nature of racism
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
Mr Berger has, with great courage and strength allowed readers into his own past in order to explain how racism is fostered and taints our every day lives. I am sure, given Mr. Berger's position and reputation it was not an easy task for him to deal with his past let alone display for all. Yet his experiences and those of other contributors let readers understand the insidious nature of racism from personal perspectives without it being a collection of hard luck stories. I found hearing from both black and white contributors so necessary to gain an understanding of what is an increasingly complex issue due to the extent of which it is ignored or deemed to be "cured".Current studies concerning "whiteness" and current modes of thinking concerning race are also looked, making this an extremely well rounded debate. I found this book to be extremely easy to read, both very touching and one of the most intelligent views on racism of late. Ilook forward to reading far more by Mr.Berger on this most important topic in the future and hope his work extends past America in the future.
Original, surprising memoir unpeeling truths: ours and his.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
Maurice Berger's WHITE LIES challenges--the writing is potent, distilled, and very clear; the content probes, through the vehicle of his own life and stories and writings of others, many assumptions, especially those of white people who may consider themselves beyond racism of any kind. The format is different and fresh, full of subtle (and not-so-subtle) surprises about our own attitudes, the world we live in, and the permeation of racism in our culture. The power of whiteness seeps into everything--an awakening to what's always been obvious to non-whites. But it is also a memoir, and equally fascinating in that repect. Here is a man who understands "otherness" and the powerlessness that goes with it. His youth is spent as one who is fiercely intelligent and sensitive, but trapped in his own, often confounding cage of otherness. In particular, the portraits of his parents are compelling, conveying Berger's love and frustration. In Berger's spare language, they come to life, almost jump off the page, as complicated and isolated, from society and each other. What he shows us throughout is profound, disturbing, but somehow hopeful. He portrays, rather than eviscerates, the realities of our society. I saw it more as a wake-up call than a condemnation. His vision is clear, and he opens our eyes as well. It's a book to think about long after the last page is read.
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