User Login
Forgot your password? Click Here.
Playlist
What are playlists? Click Here.



Race: no gene has substantiated it and no scientist has quantified it, yet it continues to polarize the world’s populations like no other concept. This compelling program examines the history and power of the artificial distinction called "race," viewing it within historical, scientific, and cultural contexts. Topics include the anthropological unity of Homo sapiens; sanctioned discrimination, such as segregation; cultural biases based on racial stereotypes; and the underlying humanity that inextricably links us all. A Discovery Channel Production. (52 minutes)



 
        

Item#: This title is currently not available.
Copyright date: ©1994




     


Not available to Home Video customers. Only available in the US, Asia and Canada.




Beyond Black and White: Affirmative Action in America-A Fred Friendly Seminar
View Video Clip
All sides of the affirmative action issue have targeted the same goal: ending racism of all types. But do opportunities for some have to come at the expense of others? In this Fred Friendly Seminar moderated by Harvard Law School's Charles Ogletree, ...(more details)
 
How Biased Are You?
View Video Clip
This program unflinchingly explores the history and practice of racism through its extreme manifestations-slavery, the Holocaust, segregation, bias crimes, racial profiling-and its more subtle demonstrations, such as the pernicious subconscious biase...(more details)
 
A History of Social Classes
View Video Clip
Marx divided the industrial world into two antagonistic classes: the bourgeois and the proletariat. In today's society, this simple dichotomy fails to capture the many segments of a global marketplace. From the communal hunter/gatherers and agrarian ...(more details)
 
The Price of Racism

This program brings viewers face-to-face with the mindless ugliness and irrevocable consequences of racism. Examining five case studies in which racism led to violence, we see how each act destroyed not only its victim, but others as well, including ...(more details)
 
Little Things: When Prejudice Is Unintentional
View Video Clip
A great classroom conversation starter, this ABC News program explores the kinds of incidents and behavior that prompted The New York Times reporter Lena Williams to write an article entitled, "The Everyday Interactions that Get under the Skin of Bla...(more details)
 


See additional titles in Character Education & Development | Social Psychology | Cultural Anthropology | Social Work | Social Inequality