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The Racial Contract cover art

The Racial Contract

By: Charles Wade Mills
Narrated by: Jeff Wilburn
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Summary

The Racial Contract puts classic Western social contract theory to extraordinary radical use. With a sweeping look at the European expansionism and racism of the last 500 years, Charles W. Mills demonstrates how this peculiar and unacknowledged "contract" has shaped a system of global European domination: how it brings into existence "whites" and "non-whites," full persons and sub-persons, how it influences white moral theory and moral psychology; and how this system is imposed on non-whites through ideological conditioning and violence. The Racial Contract argues that the society we live in is a continuing white supremacist state.

Holding up a mirror to mainstream philosophy, this provocative book explains the evolving outline of the racial contract from the time of the New World conquest and subsequent colonialism to the written slavery contract, to the "separate but equal" system of segregation in the twentieth-century United States. According to Mills, the contract has provided the theoretical architecture justifying an entire history of European atrocity against non-whites, from David Hume's and Immanuel Kant's claims that blacks had inferior cognitive power, to the Holocaust, to the kind of imperialism in Asia that was demonstrated by the Vietnam War.

Mills suggests that the ghettoization of philosophical work on race is no accident. This book challenges the assumption that mainstream theory is itself raceless. Just as feminist theory has revealed orthodox political philosophy's invisible white male bias, Mills's explication of the racial contract exposes its racial underpinnings.

©1997 Cornell University (P)2016 Cornell University

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A broadside against ‘universal’ values

A concise and deep critique of social-political theory. It is an affirmation that social norms and abstract concepts around ‘civilisation’ have boundaries that are mostly racial in nature.

A focus on mainstream values and assumptions that prompts further reading but roundly lands a haymaker on the temple of universal values.

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Timeless, brilliant

This is a well written classic that challenges the social contractarian theories by addressing to the ontological and sociopolitical aspects that divides societies by a racial contract. The performance makes justice to this brilliant book.

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