ABSTRACT

For many decades, race and racism have been common areas of study in departments of sociology, history, political science, English, and anthropology. Much more recently, as the historical concept of race and racial categories have faced significant scientific and political challenges, philosophers have become more interested in these areas. This changing understanding of the ontology of race has invited inquiry from researchers in moral philosophy, metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of science, philosophy of language, and aesthetics.

The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Race offers in one comprehensive volume newly written articles on race from the world’s leading analytic and continental philosophers. It is, however, accessible to a readership beyond philosophy as well, providing a cohesive reference for a wide student and academic readership. The Companion synthesizes current philosophical understandings of race, providing 37 chapters on the history of philosophy and race as well as how race might be investigated in the usual frameworks of contemporary philosophy. The volume concludes with a section on philosophical approaches to some topics with broad interest outside of philosophy, like colonialism, affirmative action, eugenics, immigration, race and disability, and post-racialism.

By clearly explaining and carefully organizing the leading current philosophical thinking on race, this timely collection will help define the subject and bring renewed understanding of race to students and researchers in the humanities, social science, and sciences.

part I|123 pages

History and the Canon

chapter 2|14 pages

Of Problem Moderns and Excluded Moderns

On the Essential Hybridity of Modernity *

chapter 3|15 pages

Kant on Race and Transition

chapter 4|18 pages

Hegel on Race and Development

chapter 5|14 pages

Heidegger’s Shadow

Levinas, Arendt, and the Magician From Messkirch

chapter 6|13 pages

Race-ing the Canon

American Icons, From Thomas Jefferson to Alain Locke

chapter 7|14 pages

At the Intersections

Existentialism, Critical Philosophies of Race, and Feminism

chapter 8|11 pages

Critical Theory

Adorno, Marcuse, and Angela Davis

chapter 9|11 pages

Post-structuralism and Race

Giorgio Agamben and Michel Foucault

part II|75 pages

Alternative Traditions

part III|44 pages

Metaphysics and Ontology

chapter 15|13 pages

Analytic Metaphysics

Race and Racial Identity

chapter 16|17 pages

American Experimentalism

part IV|57 pages

Epistemology, Cognition, and Language

chapter 19|16 pages

Implicit Bias and Race

chapter 20|13 pages

The Mark of the Plural

Generic Generalizations and Race

chapter 21|12 pages

Psychoanalysis and Race

part V|59 pages

Natural Science and Social Theory

chapter 22|16 pages

Race and Biology

chapter 23|14 pages

Eugenics

chapter 24|14 pages

Framing Intersectionality

chapter 25|13 pages

Canonizing the Critical Race Artifice

An Analysis of Philosophy’s Gentrification of Critical Race Theory

part VI|40 pages

Aesthetics

chapter 26|15 pages

Race-ing Aesthetic Theory

chapter 28|12 pages

Anti-black Racism

The Greatest Art Show on Earth

part VII|85 pages

Ethics and the Political

chapter 29|18 pages

Racism

chapter 30|23 pages

On Race and Solidarity

Reconsiderations

chapter 31|15 pages

Race, Luck, and the Moral Emotions

chapter 32|14 pages

Racism and Coloniality

The Invention of “HUMAN(ITY)” and the Three Pillars of the Colonial Matrix of Power (Racism, Sexism, and Nature)

chapter 33|13 pages

White Supremacy

part VIII|60 pages

Politics and Policy

chapter 34|16 pages

On Post-racialism

Or, How Color-Blindness Rebranded Is Still Vicious

chapter 36|19 pages

Mixed-Race