Gross, What Blood Won't Tell - A History Of Race On Trial In America

Authors

  • Jill Gill Boise State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33043/TH.34.2.106-107

Abstract

In recent decades, biological and social scientists have rejected the notion of distinct human races. Rather, they assert, race was a creation of human culture, crafted to help manufacture, sustain, and justify socio-political and economic hierarchies. In What Blood Won't Tell: A History of Race on Trial, Ariela Gross, professor of history and law, uses race trials from the antebellum period to the present as a window into how local communities of common white America shaped and reshaped our racial understandings through their legal systems in order to preserve their hierarchies.

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Published

2009-09-01

How to Cite

Gill, Jill. 2009. “Gross, What Blood Won’t Tell - A History Of Race On Trial In America”. Teaching History: A Journal of Methods 34 (2):106-7. https://doi.org/10.33043/TH.34.2.106-107.

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