"It's not just a challenge to racists, it's a challenge to people like me, it's a challenge to African-Americans who have accepted the fact of race and define themselves by the concept of race."
--Ta-Nehisi Coates
"Fundamentally challenged some of my oldest and laziest ideas about race."
--Zadie Smith
"These essays are extraordinary. I love the forceful elegance with which they hammer home that race is a monstrous fiction, racism is a monstrous crime."
--Junot Díaz
"Demanding and intelligent."
--Jennifer Vega, PopMatters
"Karen E. Fields and Barbara J. Fields have undertaken a great untangling of how the chimerical concepts of race are pervasively and continuously reinvented and reemployed in this country."
--Maria Bustillos, Los Angeles Review of Books
"The neologism 'racecraft' is modelled on 'witchcraft' … It isn't that the Fieldses
regard the commitment to race as a category as an irrational superstition. On the
contrary, they are interested precisely in exploring its rationality--the role that
beliefs about race play in structuring American society--while at the same time
reminding us that those beliefs may be rational but they're not true."
--Walter Benn Michaels, London Review of Books
"A most impressive work, tackling a demanding and important topic--the myth that we now live in a postracial society--in a novel, urgent, and compelling way. The authors dispel this myth by squarely addressing the paradox that racism is scientifically discredited but, like witchcraft before it, retains a social rationale in societies that remain highly unequal and averse to sufficiently critical engagement with their own history and traditions."
--Robin Blackburn
"[Racecraft] should be more widely read than it is--no matter its current reach. In it, the authors achieve an intelligence and agility that is rare in discussions of identity, racism, and inequality."
--Matthew McKnight, Nation
"Liberal mores against overt racism are crumbling in the face of Trump. We must build them better … The Fields sisters dive through sociology, history, and science to reach the material truth: races is a product of racism, not the other way around."
--Charlie Heller, Paste
"With examples ranging from the profound to the absurd--including, for instance, an imaginary interview with W.E.B. Dubois and Emile Durkheim, as well as personal porch chats with the authors' grandmother--the Fields delve into 'racecraft's' profound effect on American political, social and economic life."
--Global Journal
"This is a very thoughtful book, a very urgent book."
--The Academic & The Artist Cloudcast
"Ostensibly 'antiracist' politics that treat racial categories as if they were real … perpetuate what they purport to resist. As this form of counterproductive antiracism becomes hegemonic in our culture, the Fieldses' insights are increasingly salient."
--Blake Smith, Washington Examiner