The Silent War: Imperialism and the Changing Perception of Race is a book by the Hungarian sociologist Frank Furedi, published by Pluto Press in 1998 (ISBN 0745313035)
Contents
Introduction
- The silent race war theme
- A dramatic shift in racial thinking
- The pressures towards the new consensus
- The crisis of the West
- Bad faith and the fear of revenge
- The challenge from the colonies
- The pressure of the Soviet alternative
- The weak point of the Anglo-American political culture
- Towards a new race etiquette
Chapters
- The troubled white consensus
- A troubled consensus
- The breakdown of white solidarity
- The final stand
- Early warnings: presentiment of racial conflict
- The presentiment of danger
- The sense of race
- The numbers game
- The power of numbers
- Silent alarm
- The new racial pragmatism
- At a distance
- Advocacy of difference
- As economic disadvantage
- Reversing the problem of racism
- Race consciousness
- Interpreting the reaction to racial consciousness
- Reversing the racial motive
- Crossing the boundary: the marginal man
- Drawing a line: the marginal man
- Sociological contributions
- Holding the line
- The panic about the detribalised soldier
- The Second World War as race war
- Racial themes during the war
- White fears
- Racial interpretation of the demand for equality
- The war as an opportunity for the racially oppressed
- The role of Japan and the war in Asia
- An international issue
- Counter-propaganda towards 'colour feeling'
- The emerging racial calculations
- As an international issue
- Imagining changes in the world in racial terms
- The fear of losing the Third World
- Depoliticising the issue of race relations
- The silent 1950s: redefining the issue of racism
- The eternalisation of racism
- A silent subject
- Conclusion
- The legacy of containment
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