ABSTRACT

Few people today would admit to being a racist, or to making assumptions about individuals based on their skin colour, or on their gender or social class. In this book, leading psychologist Geoffrey Beattie asks if prejudice, more subtle than before, is still a major part of our everyday lives.

Beattie suggests that implicit biases based around race are not just found in small sections of our society, but that they also exist in the psyches of even the most liberal, educated and fair-minded of us. More importantly, the book outlines how these ‘hidden’ attitudes and prejudices can be revealed and measured, and how they in turn predict behaviours in a number of important social situations.

Our Racist Heart? takes a fresh look at our racial attitudes, using new technology and experimental approaches to show how unconscious biases influence our everyday actions and thinking. These groundbreaking results are brought to life using the author’s own experiences of class and religious prejudice in Northern Ireland, and are also discussed in relation to the history of race, racism and social psychological theory.

part I|96 pages

Challenged by history

chapter 1|21 pages

Introduction: approaches and avoidances

chapter 2|8 pages

A room steeped in the past

chapter 4|9 pages

Who needs the Negro?

chapter 5|36 pages

The nature of prejudice

part II|52 pages

A pipeline to the soul?

chapter 7|11 pages

The inner conflict

chapter 8|6 pages

How much of our attitude is unconscious?

chapter 9|5 pages

Measuring the unconscious

chapter 10|10 pages

A new way into our unconscious attitude

chapter 11|10 pages

By-passing the conscious mind

part III|112 pages

The project itself: are we implicitly racist?