Learning Goal: I’m working on a anthropology writing question and need the explanation and answer to help me learn.
Choose one book from the list below to construct a minimum 800-word review. This assignment is unlike a book report you may have completed in high school; you should avoid summarizing or re-stating the book’s themes. Instead, use your book review to address the following three questions:
a. What does the text suggest about the gender politics of white nationalism?
b. Based on the authors or editors approach to the issues or any explicitly stated philosophy, what is the texts underlying political and social agenda? The answer to this question should not be: the books subject is…, but rather, an identification of what the authors or editors want. What changes in policy, practice, or social structures do they want to bring about? What are they trying to persuade their readers of?
c. How does the text relate to the course reserve readings, lectures or other materials? Be very explicit— citing other readings, concepts from lectures, films, or speakers specifically. What does the text add to your understanding of the issues we are addressing in this course? Just mentioning other materials is not adequate. You should explain how they relate to the book or vice versa.
Also, my professor uses a plagiarism and AI detector so there can’t be plagiarism of any sort. This needs to be an original book review without anything used from prior work. Thank you.
Strong Men: Mussolini to the Present, by Ruth Ben-Ghiat
Sisters in Hate: American Women on the Front Lines of White Nationalism, by Seyward Darby
Inside Organized Racism: Women in the Hate Movement, by Kathleen M.Blee
Race, Gender & Class in the Tea Party: What the Movement Reflects About Mainstream Ideologies, by Meghan A. Burke
Gender & Jim Crow: Women and the Politics of White Supremacy in North Carolina, 1896-1920, by Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore
Taking America Back for God: Christian Nationalism in the United States, by Andrew L. Whitehead & Samuel L. Perry
The Divine Institution: White Evangelicalisms Politics of the Family, by Sophie Bjork-James
Pastels & Pedophiles: Inside the Mind of QAnon, by Mia Bloom & Sophia Moskalenko