American life is filled with talk of progress and equality, especially
when the issue is that of race. But has the history of race in America
really been the continuous march toward equality we'd like to imagine it
has? This sweeping history of race in America argues quite the opposite:
that progress toward equality has been sporadic, isolated, and
surrounded by long periods of stagnation and retrenchment.
"[An] unflinching portrait of the leviathan of American race
relations. . . . This important book should be read by all who aspire to
create a more perfect union."--Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Could it be that our unswerving belief in the power of our core values
to produce racial equality is nothing but a comforting myth? That is the
main argument put forth by Philip Klinkner and Rogers Smith . . . The
Unsteady March is disturbing because it calls into question our
cherished national belief and does so convincingly. . . . [It] is
beautifully written, and the social history it provides is illuminating
and penetrating."--Aldon Morris, American Journal of Sociology
Winner of the Horace Mann Bond Award of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for
Afro-American Research at Harvard University.