Who's the Bigot?: Learning from Conflicts over Marriage and Civil Rights Law
Autor Linda C. McClainen Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 apr 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190877200
ISBN-10: 0190877200
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 236 x 163 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190877200
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 236 x 163 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Who's the Bigot? illuminates how "the rhetoric of bigotry" enables inaction in the face of systemic and structural discrimination. McClain's powerful insight thus has much to offer in any examination of social inclusion, whether it be based on sexual orientation, gender identity, gender, race, ethnicity or any other ism.
The book offers meaningful lessons about the rhetoric of bigotry and its puzzles for civil rights struggles, especially in this uniquely polarized period in United States history. Overall, McClain's book makes an original contribution to our understanding of bigotry, especially in struggles at the intersection of family law and civil rights... McClain's important work provides a framework for understanding how rhetoric involving bigotry is being harnessed by both sides of the ongoing legal battles over broad religious exemptions and LGBTQ child welfare... McClain's insightful book builds a persuasive case for why the legal inquiry in struggles over marriage and civil rights should not narrowly focus on whether religious sincerity or appeals to conscience deserve moral condemnation.
Linda McClain helps us understand our present moment of crisis-prone incivility via a single word: the bigot. Deftly assessing past changes in the American legal recognition of interfaith, interracial and same-sex marriage, as well as desegration and integration, she shows that calling out bigotry has sometimes promoted civility, and yet has also undermined it. This feminist defense of diversity and equality helps to debunk purported moral equivalences, and charts an important way forward for law, religion and public life.
Linda McClain's book is a meticulously researched and compellingly presented study of moral and political language. She illuminates the different ways in which the term "bigot" has been used in American constitutional law, from the battles over slavery in the nineteenth century to the skirmishes over same sex marriage in the twenty-first.
McClain provides readers a way to understand the meaning, the boundary, and even the accommodation of bigotry. The book would be of interest not just to legal scholars but also to those studying law from a perspective of political theory, sociology, or history. The scope and depth of McClain's book is impressive and she has a lot to teach her readers. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about society's conflicts over marriage and civil rights law.
This timely, wide-ranging, and historically detailed work invites us to think more deeply about bigotry - what it is, how it has functioned in various debates over marriage, and how those debates in turn shed light on the reality and rhetoric of bigotry. McClain's book is an invaluable contribution to our perspective on these matters.
An important and clear-minded book by a leading scholar of law and public policy that explores our evolving understanding of bigotry in the context of debates over gay rights and religious liberty. Deeply illuminating.
A must read for those who are interested in seeing the modern social psychological understanding of racism applied to American religion.
Through historical excavation and close readings of primary texts, Linda McClain examines the meaning and use of bigotry over time. By situating us in the thick of past conflicts over equality, McClain shows that views we now repudiate as bigoted were once within the realm of reasonable debate. Her book should be a warning for proponents of equality law today: Labeling one's opponents as bigots may obscure, rather than illuminate, connections between past and present struggles. Instead, by unearthing the similarities in justifications for inequality over time, McClain leaves us better able to appreciate the relationship between struggles for racial equality and struggles for LGBT equality.
At a time when public discourse is so charged, and the label "bigot" carries enormous emotional and psychological weight, Linda McClain helpfully unpacks the legal provenance of this fraught term. Drawing on a diverse range of contexts - from interracial marriage to the present debate over conscience exemptions - McClain considers what it means, as a matter of law and culture, to characterize someone (and their actions) as bigoted. This is required reading for anyone who wants to understand our polarized society and how we got here.
The book offers meaningful lessons about the rhetoric of bigotry and its puzzles for civil rights struggles, especially in this uniquely polarized period in United States history. Overall, McClain's book makes an original contribution to our understanding of bigotry, especially in struggles at the intersection of family law and civil rights... McClain's important work provides a framework for understanding how rhetoric involving bigotry is being harnessed by both sides of the ongoing legal battles over broad religious exemptions and LGBTQ child welfare... McClain's insightful book builds a persuasive case for why the legal inquiry in struggles over marriage and civil rights should not narrowly focus on whether religious sincerity or appeals to conscience deserve moral condemnation.
Linda McClain helps us understand our present moment of crisis-prone incivility via a single word: the bigot. Deftly assessing past changes in the American legal recognition of interfaith, interracial and same-sex marriage, as well as desegration and integration, she shows that calling out bigotry has sometimes promoted civility, and yet has also undermined it. This feminist defense of diversity and equality helps to debunk purported moral equivalences, and charts an important way forward for law, religion and public life.
Linda McClain's book is a meticulously researched and compellingly presented study of moral and political language. She illuminates the different ways in which the term "bigot" has been used in American constitutional law, from the battles over slavery in the nineteenth century to the skirmishes over same sex marriage in the twenty-first.
McClain provides readers a way to understand the meaning, the boundary, and even the accommodation of bigotry. The book would be of interest not just to legal scholars but also to those studying law from a perspective of political theory, sociology, or history. The scope and depth of McClain's book is impressive and she has a lot to teach her readers. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about society's conflicts over marriage and civil rights law.
This timely, wide-ranging, and historically detailed work invites us to think more deeply about bigotry - what it is, how it has functioned in various debates over marriage, and how those debates in turn shed light on the reality and rhetoric of bigotry. McClain's book is an invaluable contribution to our perspective on these matters.
An important and clear-minded book by a leading scholar of law and public policy that explores our evolving understanding of bigotry in the context of debates over gay rights and religious liberty. Deeply illuminating.
A must read for those who are interested in seeing the modern social psychological understanding of racism applied to American religion.
Through historical excavation and close readings of primary texts, Linda McClain examines the meaning and use of bigotry over time. By situating us in the thick of past conflicts over equality, McClain shows that views we now repudiate as bigoted were once within the realm of reasonable debate. Her book should be a warning for proponents of equality law today: Labeling one's opponents as bigots may obscure, rather than illuminate, connections between past and present struggles. Instead, by unearthing the similarities in justifications for inequality over time, McClain leaves us better able to appreciate the relationship between struggles for racial equality and struggles for LGBT equality.
At a time when public discourse is so charged, and the label "bigot" carries enormous emotional and psychological weight, Linda McClain helpfully unpacks the legal provenance of this fraught term. Drawing on a diverse range of contexts - from interracial marriage to the present debate over conscience exemptions - McClain considers what it means, as a matter of law and culture, to characterize someone (and their actions) as bigoted. This is required reading for anyone who wants to understand our polarized society and how we got here.
Notă biografică
Linda C. McClain is the Robert Kent Professor at Boston University School of Law. She also teaches in BU's Kilachand Honors College. An internationally known scholar, she has written about marriage, family law, civil rights law, gender equality and law, feminist legal theory, and law and religion. She has held fellowships at the University Center for Human Values, Princeton University, and the Safra Center at Harvard University. Her books include The Place of Families: Fostering Capacity, Equality, and Responsibility, Ordered Liberty: Rights, Responsibilities, and Virtues (with James E. Fleming), Gender Equality: Dimensions of Women's Equal Citizenship (co-edited with Joanna Grossman and cited in the credits for On the Basis of Sex), and What Is Parenthood? Contemporary Debates About the Family. A graduate of Oberlin College, she has an M.A. from University of Chicago Divinity School, a J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center, and an LL.M. from NYU School of Law.