May 2006 Vol. 104 No. 6 THE REVIEW

Brown, et al.: Whitewashing Race
Ogletree: All Deliberate Speed
Tsesis: The Thirteenth Amendment and American Freedom

Richard Delgado

The Current Landscape of Race:
Old Targets, New Opportunities

Whitewashing Race: The Myth of a Color-Blind Society. By Michael K. Brown, Martin Carnoy, Elliott Currie, Troy Duster, David B. Oppenheimer, Marjorie M. Shultz, and David Wellman. Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press. 2003. Pp. vii, 338. Cloth, $40; paper, $17.95.

All Deliberate Speed: Reflections on the First Half-Century of Brown v. Board of Education. By Charles J. Ogletree, Jr. New York and London: W.W. Norton & Company. 2004. Pp. xi, 365. Cloth, $25.95; paper, $15.95.

The Thirteenth Amendment and American Freedom: A Legal History. By Alexander Tsesis. New York and London: New York University Press. 2004. Pp. ix, 228. $45.

It is difficult enough identifying areas within a current field of scholarship that are underdeveloped and in need of further attention. In science, one thinks of missing elements in the periodic table or planets in a solar system that our calculations tell us must be there but that our telescopes have not yet spotted. In civil-rights law, one thinks of such areas as women’s sports or the problems of intersectional groups, such as women of color or gay black men. One also thinks of issues that current events are constantly thrusting forward, such as discrimination against Arabs or execution of children or the mentally retarded.

What of challenges that do not come readily to mind because they lie outside the current paradigm—problems that we do not readily think of as civil-rights issues at all, or that are so radically unlike those we do recognize that they require a leap of the imagination to see them as such? Here, we lack a template—a periodic table. We cannot easily make the link between the familiar and the unknown. The new issue does not lie on the same plane as those we know, so that mental extrapolation and interpolation do not readily lead us to it.

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