A sober, dispassionate analysis of the failure of integrating black Americans into mainstream economic life. Dattel is an economic historian who explores the various responses of black leaders throughout history toward white racial animosity. Some of Dattel's most surprising, and potentially controversial conclusions are:
1) that the animosity by Northern whites is mostly forgotten, but was a key factor playing into the awful condition of black America. While the South is, quite rightly, pointed to as the engine driving slavery, Jim Crow, etc., part of the reason things were so terrible was due to Northern containment strategies of keeping blacks in the South. Some of the racist laws Dattel highlights from Northern states are truly jaw dropping. In addition, even after the Great Migration, the end of Jim Crow, etc., the Northern whites still had racist attitudes toward blacks that were hypocritical in the extreme.
Dattel rightly points out that to reckon with race, we must understand this was not the South's failure only, but *America's* failure.
2) The other potentially controversial argument is Dattel's contention that what is needed today is an approach to race relations that is fundamentally different than that during the Civil Rights movement. Many of the issues of the Civil Rights movement, in Dattel's consideration, have been overcome. Voting rights, Jim Crow laws, etc. have all been overturned and, further, America's views on race have changed significantly since the turbulent days of the Civil Rights era. What is needed today is to continue to move away from a politics of grievance toward self-reflection and integration in the mainstream of American economic life. "Bourgeois" virtues like thrift, hard-work, fidelity are not "white" virtues but virtues that are colorblind and the key toward the economic mainstream. Many of the tactics used by prominent black leaders and organizations today, Dattel argues, are no longer sufficient for the task of racial integration.
I found Dattel to be deeply insightful. If we are going to have a better "conversation" about race today, and especially with regards to policy, then books like *Reckoning with Race* should be invited to the table. Highly recommended.