The Making of White American Identity
Ron Eyerman
Reviews and Awards
"Ron Eyerman's account of whiteness is inevitably personal and necessarily informed by theory and history. His focus is not on the whiteness always already present since Europeans arrived, but on whiteness made and remade, especially in relation to cultural traumas like the Civil War. From the colonies through the KKK, race in the media, response to the Obama presidency, confrontation over Confederate statues in Charlottesville and the storming of the Capitol, Eyerman insightfully shows the centrality of whiteness to both meaning making and political mobilization. He concludes where we must begin, with the dangers posed by threatened, injured whiteness today." -- Craig Calhoun, Arizona State University and LSE
"Ron Eyerman gives us a new and vitally significant understanding of 'whiteness'—that it is not born but made. Always a latent identity, whiteness becomes a manifest one in response to the traumatic fear—baseless in objective terms—that people who share nothing but light skin tone are somehow being threatened with extinction. Eyerman is a brilliant intellectual and this book is a tour de force." -- Jeffrey Alexander, Lillian Chavenson Saden Professor of Sociology, Yale University