Reviews

White Flights: Race, Fiction, and the American Imagination by Jess Row

eroggbyrne's review

Go to review page

4.0

Reading this book felt like going to a lecture with a dynamic professor when you haven't done any of the reading. Thought provoking without having read 90% of the authors he cites (and having no desire to do so!), I will be chewing on this one for a long time to come.

bettyreads's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

Don't mind me just updating my goodreads lol

this book was a lot, it's important for folks, specifically white folks, in that it gives space to interrogate whiteness, white supremacy and the whole structure.

Jess has too many references in here to things that i've never heard of so it made it feel pretty inaccessible and just esoteric in nature but hey if that's your jam, you do you.

nick_jenkins's review

Go to review page

5.0

Emotionally and intellectually draining, but also exhilarating, germinal. Most of the book is not easily paraphrased or condensed, but here is a passage that I think sums at least one of the bigger points Row makes:

"White people–even those committed, in theory, to the struggle against white supremacy–do not know how to share power. White people do not know how to let white supremacy die without feeling they themselves are dying." (272)

One of the phrases that echoed through my head while reading this is Ta-Nehisi Coates's "the people who think they are white." Like Coates, like Baldwin, Row thinks of whiteness as a kind of self-imposed spiritual malady--not as something to have pity for, but as something that we can recognize as a severe limitation or stunting. The point is definitely not to feel sorry for "the people who think they are white," and there is no individual way to give up one's whiteness, one's white privilege--that is not a way out. The point is rather, I think, to reflect on the comprehensiveness of the global ruination that the idea of whiteness has caused, a desolation so complete that it cannot escape itself.
More...