Author:
Bobo Lawrence D.,Dawson Michael C.
Abstract
Has Barack Obama's success transformed the racial divide? Did he somehow transcend or help bring to an end centuries of racial division in the United States? Did he deliberately run a strategically race-neutral, race-evading campaign? Did his race and ingrained American racism constrain the reach of his success? Have we arrived at that postracial moment that has long been the stuff of dreams and high oratory? Or was the outcome of the 2008 presidential election driven entirely by nonracial factors, such as a weak Republican ticket, an incumbent party saddled with defending an unpopular war, and a worsening economic crisis? It is at once too simple and yet entirely appropriate to say that the answers to these questions are, in a phrase, complicated matters. These complexities can, however, be brought into sharper focus.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Reference38 articles.
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2. CNNPolitics.com (2008). Election Center 2008. ⟨http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/⟩ (last accessed June 5, 2009).
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4. The Joshua Generation: Race and the Campaign of Barack Obama;Remnick;New Yorker,2008
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