Authors
Dina Walker-DeVose, Akiv Dawson, April M Schueths, Ted Brimeyer, Jonique Y Freeman
Publication date
2019
Journal
Race Ethnicity and Education
Volume
22
Issue
3
Pages
355-373
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Informed by critical race theory (CRT), we examine how African-American and white college students, at a predominantly white, structurally diverse, Southern US university, understand their cross-racial experiences. Black–white interactions are understood within the context of the so-called ‘post-racial’ environment, against the backdrop of high-profile cases of racial injustice, and within the added context of the historical legacy of slavery and Jim Crow segregation in the rural Southern United States. Our study suggests that many students, regardless of race, recognized the persistence of racial segregation, especially in nightlife and campus Greek letter organizations (GLOs). African-American students were the most vocal and troubled by this division. Unexpectedly, however, students appeared to take for granted that in the American South, racism is persistent and indestructible. Building on Bell’s (1991) notion of …
Total citations
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