Dying of Whiteness
How the Politics of Racial Resentment Is Killing America's Heartland
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
A physician's "provocative" (Boston Globe) and "timely" (Ibram X. Kendi, New York Times Book Review) account of how right-wing backlash policies have deadly consequences -- even for the white voters they promise to help.
In election after election, conservative white Americans have embraced politicians who pledge to make their lives great again. But as physician Jonathan M. Metzl shows in Dying of Whiteness, the policies that result actually place white Americans at ever-greater risk of sickness and death. Interviewing a range of everyday Americans, Metzl examines how racial resentment has fueled progun laws in Missouri, resistance to the Affordable Care Act in Tennessee, and cuts to schools and social services in Kansas. He shows these policies' costs: increasing deaths by gun suicide, falling life expectancies, and rising dropout rates.
Now updated with a new afterword, Dying of Whiteness demonstrates how much white America would benefit by emphasizing cooperation rather than chasing false promises of supremacy.
Winner of the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this groundbreaking work, Metzl, physician and director of the Vanderbilt Center for Medicine, Health, and Society, demonstrates the "mortal trade-offs" white Americans make when they vote with the goal of restoring their racial privilege and end up endorsing "political positions that directly harm their own health and well-being." Metzl methodically and adeptly marshals statistical evidence that policies promising to bolster white Americans' status have instead made life "sicker, harder, and shorter" for all Americans. He finds that, in Missouri, under the lax gun laws white voters favored, white men became 2.38 times more likely than men of other races to die by firearm suicide. In Tennessee, opposition to the Affordable Care Act "cost every single white resident of the state 14.1 days of life"; many white Tennesseans, Metzl writes, "voiced a willingness to die, literally, rather than embrace a law that gave minority or immigrant persons more access to care." A "Tea Party-fueled" gutting of school funding in Kansas greatly increased the number of people dropping out of high school, which "correlates with nine years of lost life expectancy." This tightly constructed analysis of the unexpected consequences of American political behavior exemplifies excellence in argumentative writing, on a topic of cultural significance.)