The Invisible Weight of Whiteness: The Racial Grammar of Everyday Life in Contemporary America (Lecture by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva) |
Fall 2010 Honors Colloquium: RACE
University of Rhode Island
Edwards Auditorium, URI Kingston Campus
Tuesday, 2010-10-12, 19:00 ET (Local Time); (23:00Z)
Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, Professor of Sociology
Duke University
A series of public programs at the University of Rhode Island presented by the URI Honors Program
Join us! The public is invited to attend this series of free events.
Perceptions about race shape everyday experiences, public policies, opportunities for individual achievement, and relations across racial and ethnic lines. In this colloquium we will explore key issues of race, showing how race still matters.
Other works by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva:
- “More Than Black? Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order by G. Reginald Daniel [Book Review]”
- “Opting for White: choice, fluidity and racial identity construction in post civil-rights America”
- “From bi-racial to tri-racial: Towards a new system of racial stratification in the USA”
- “Black, Honorary White, White: The Future of Race in the United States?” in Mixed Messages: Multiracial Identities in the “Color-Blind” Era (with David G. Embrick)