Book description
THE TIME NONFICTION BOOK OF THE YEAR | #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
"Powerful and timely ... I cannot recommend it strongly enough" - Barack Obama
From one of America's most celebrated and insightful writers, the moving, eye-opening bestseller about what lies hidden under the surface of ordinary lives
In…
Why read it?
19 authors picked Caste as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
This book resonated deeply with me, and I enjoyed every word. Isabel beautifully bridges East and West by comparing two cultures. Thank you for sharing your incredible work with the world.
Wilkerson’s excellent writing kept me reading for the entire 400+ pages. Almost a collection of essays, each chapter tackles an aspect of the function, history, perpetuation, cost to society, etc. of cast. Wilkerson targets the color/race based cast system in the US, the religion based cast system in India, and the 12 years in Nazi Germany when the government established and enforced it’s own caste system. Much of what she reveals in her examples and facts about cast in the US are gut wrenching and eye-opening. Particularly eye-opening is the author's comparison of U.S. monuments to the Confederacy to the…
Anyone living in the United States copes with racism, the cruel legacy of slavery and the degree to which skin-color prejudice continues to affect our lives through politics, education, health care, law enforcement, and social traditions. This book looks at American racism as a caste system, similar to India’s caste system. An impeccable researcher and brilliant writer, Isabel Wilkerson draws on cultural, social, and personal histories to put America’s racism in a broader world context of prejudices based on physical characteristics. She uses the metaphor of disease to compare skin-color prejudice to pathogens. "“Human pathogens of hatred and tribalism in…
If you love Caste...
I loved this book because the author was able to share the racist encounters that she had to deal with and the racist encounters all minorities deal with at one time or another. This book puts a new intellectual perspective on those types of happenings. They also illustrated many racist encounters that are all too common and yet hard to believe. A must-read for all.
From Louis' list on understanding each other in a troubled world.
As a daily print journalist for more than two decades, I know what goes into researching a complex story. For my money, no one does this as well as Pulitzer Prize-winning author Isabel Wilkerson.
In Caste, Wilkerson dives deep, never settling for easy answers, and taking head on one of the most divisive issues that has plagued America. The questions she raises and explanations she offers – all rigorously and thoroughly researched and documented – are provocative as well as enlightening – for anyone willing to listen.
Changing the status quo begins with understanding, and, for me, this work…
It is very apparent the work that Isabel Wilkerson did to write such a compelling work. I read the 395 pages plus in two days. I enjoyed reviewing the section called “Notes.” It was such a good read that I had a hard time putting the book down.
This is more than a feel-good book. Isabel Wilkerson took the time to do the impressive research. Only then did she type this manuscript. The vocabulary and the passion that I feel as I read this book are hard to explain. Certain truths are revealed in this book. It’s reading time without…
If you love Isabel Wilkerson...
I found this book to be a well-researched and convincing account of the racial hierarchy in the United States, which Wilkerson identifies as a caste system. In part, Wilkerson justifies this label through comparisons with India’s caste system, and the caste system which was in place in Nazi Germany.
This book opened my eyes in many ways. Especially shocking was the degree to which Nazi leaders and academics studied the U.S policies before enacting their own laws. Wilkerson effectively argues that these racial hierarchies are not haphazard or coincidental but were/are constructed with purpose and malice.
This is one of the most important books that I have ever read.
I think that it was particularly meaningful to me because it helped me to understand my own childhood experiences in the South, where I attended a racially segregated high school. Because the author is a talented writer and journalist, it was also a very engaging read.
With respect and without any finger pointing, the author describes in a very informative and captivating style where the world went wrong in confusing racism with caste. The book illuminated my thoughts about the topic in an enriching manner. A must read for humanity and a call to action in a non-violent way.
If you love Caste...
This book reorients the concept of racism from the idea of race to assumptions of caste, familiar from India but relevant to the essential cultural definition of an entire people.
It also engages Nazi definitions of Jews as a race (though omitting Native Amerindians). It is very readable but well-researched and powerful in its indictments of overlaps between caste and class, defining an underclass in restrictive, racial terms, through cultural norms of group dehumanization.
All Americans should read this book and rethink how they were raised and how their hometown society operated.
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