Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Some of My Friends Are... : the daunting challenges and untrapped benefits of cross-racial friendships / Deborah L. Plummer,

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Boston : Beacon Books, c2019Description: 231 pages : 23 cmISBN:
  • 9780807023891
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HT 1523 .P58 2018
Contents:
Introduction: Can We Be Friends? -- Chapter 1 Living "Separate as Fingers" -- Chapter 2 Living "One as the Hand" -- Chapter 3 Two-Button Choice: Aquaintance or Lover -- Chapter 4 Same Treatment Does Not Mean Equal Treatment -- Chapter 5 What's in a Race? -- Chapter 6 Gentle (Not So Gentle) Bumping -- Chapter 7 A New Generation... A New Form of Racism -- Chapter 8 Difficult Laughs Made Easier -- Chapter 9 What We Do with Our Leisure Time -- Chapter 10 The Heavenly Vision of Racial Unity -- Chapter 11 Friends in the Big Tent -- Chapter 12 Some of My Friends Are... -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index.
Summary: "An insightful look at how cross-racial friendships work and fail within American society. In a U.S. national survey conducted for this book, 70% of respondents strongly agreed that friendships across racial lines are essential to making progress toward improving race relations. However, further polling found that most Americans tend to gravitate towards friendships within their own racial category. Psychologist, Deborah L. Plummer tells us why that is so. She examines how factors such as leisure, politics, humor, faith, social media, and education influence the nature and intensity of cross-racial friendships. With engaging stories and inspiring anecdotes drawn from national focus groups, interviews, and analyses of survey results of contemporary patterns of adult friendships, she provides insights into the fears and discomforts associated with cross-racial friendships. Through these narratives and social analyses of friendship patterns, Plummer explores how we make connections to form solid bonds, and why it is so challenging to do so across a racial divide. She discusses how we cross that divide and get beyond the prickly uncomfortable moments and have meaningful, enlightening, empathetic conversations about race. With the inclusion of personal stories, this book stirs up authentic racial discourse, prompts readers to examine their own friendship patterns, and encourages us all to create a better path toward a more enlightened future by crossing racial lines in friendship and deepening the strength of current cross-racial friends"
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
Books Books NU Clark Circulation Non-fiction GC HT 1523 .P58 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available NUCLA000001571

Includes bibliographical references and index

Introduction: Can We Be Friends? -- Chapter 1 Living "Separate as Fingers" -- Chapter 2 Living "One as the Hand" -- Chapter 3 Two-Button Choice: Aquaintance or Lover -- Chapter 4 Same Treatment Does Not Mean Equal Treatment -- Chapter 5 What's in a Race? -- Chapter 6 Gentle (Not So Gentle) Bumping -- Chapter 7 A New Generation... A New Form of Racism -- Chapter 8 Difficult Laughs Made Easier -- Chapter 9 What We Do with Our Leisure Time -- Chapter 10 The Heavenly Vision of Racial Unity -- Chapter 11 Friends in the Big Tent -- Chapter 12 Some of My Friends Are... -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index.

"An insightful look at how cross-racial friendships work and fail within American society. In a U.S. national survey conducted for this book, 70% of respondents strongly agreed that friendships across racial lines are essential to making progress toward improving race relations. However, further polling found that most Americans tend to gravitate towards friendships within their own racial category. Psychologist, Deborah L. Plummer tells us why that is so. She examines how factors such as leisure, politics, humor, faith, social media, and education influence the nature and intensity of cross-racial friendships. With engaging stories and inspiring anecdotes drawn from national focus groups, interviews, and analyses of survey results of contemporary patterns of adult friendships, she provides insights into the fears and discomforts associated with cross-racial friendships. Through these narratives and social analyses of friendship patterns, Plummer explores how we make connections to form solid bonds, and why it is so challenging to do so across a racial divide. She discusses how we cross that divide and get beyond the prickly uncomfortable moments and have meaningful, enlightening, empathetic conversations about race. With the inclusion of personal stories, this book stirs up authentic racial discourse, prompts readers to examine their own friendship patterns, and encourages us all to create a better path toward a more enlightened future by crossing racial lines in friendship and deepening the strength of current cross-racial friends"

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

© 2024 NU LRC CLARK. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy I Powered by: KOHA