As the age of globalization and New Media unite disparate groups of people in new ways, the continual transformation and interconnections between ethnicity, class, and gender become increasingly complex. This reader, comprised of a diverse array of sources ranging from the New York Times to the journals of leading research universities, explores these issues as systems of stratification that work to reinforce one another. Understanding Inequality provides students and academics with the basic hermeneutics for considering new thought on ethnicity, class, and gender in the 21st century.
Karen Blumenthal (1959-2020) was a financial journalist and editor whose career included five years with The Dallas Morning News and twenty-five with The Wall Street Journal―where her work helped earn the paper a Pulitzer Prize for its breaking news coverage of the September 11, 2001 attacks―before becoming an award-winning children’s non-fiction book writer.
Three of her books, Hillary Rodham Clinton: A Woman Living History, Steve Jobs: The Man Who Thought Different, and Bootleg: Murder, Moonshine, and the Lawless Years of Prohibition, were finalists for the YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults Award.
Karen was also the author of Six Days in October: The Stock Market Crash of 1929 (named a Sibert Honor Book), Let Me Play: The Story of Title IX (winner of the Jane Addams Children’s Book Award), Tommy: The Gun That Changed America, Bonnie and Clyde: The Making of a Legend, and Jane Against the World: Roe v. Wade and the Fight for Reproductive Rights.
Judith Butler is the author of several books including
Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity,
Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of “Sex”,
The Psychic Life of Power: Theories of Subjection, Excitable Speech, Notes Toward a Performative Theory of Assembly, and
The Force of Non-Violence. In addition to numerous academic honors and publications, Butler has published editorials and reviews in
The Guardian,
The New Statesman,
The Nation,
Time Magazine, the
London Review of Books, and in a wide range of journals, newspapers, radio and podcast programs throughout Europe, Latin America, Central and South Asia, and South Africa. They live in Berkeley.
Susan J. Douglas is the author of
Where the Girls Are,
The Mommy Myth, and other works of cultural history and criticism. She is the Catherine Neafie Kellogg Professor of Communication Studies and chair of the department at the University of Michigan, where she has taught since 1996. Her work has appeared in
The Nation,
The Progressive,
Ms.,
The Village Voice, and
In These Times. She lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Michael S. Kimmel is a well-known educator concerning gender issues. His work has appeared in dozens of magazines, newspapers and scholarly journals, including the New York Times Book Review, the Harvard Business Review, The Nation and Psychology Today, where he was a Contributing Editor and columnist on male-female relationships. His teaching examines men's lives from a pro-feminist perspective. He is national spokesperson for the National Organization for Men Against Sexism (NOMAS) in the States.
Katha Pollitt, the author of
Virginity or Death!, is a poet, essayist, and columnist for
The Nation. She has won many prizes and awards for her work, including the National Book Critics Circle Award for her first collection of poems,
Antarctic Traveller, and two National Magazine Awards for essays and criticism. She lives in New York City.