Caste

Caste

by

Isabel Wilkerson

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Caste makes teaching easy.
Caste is a person’s perceived rank in their society’s social hierarchy. Under a caste system, those in subordinate castes are denied “respect status, honor, attention privileges, resources, benefit of the doubt, and human kindness” based on their ranking. Those in dominant castes, meanwhile, are seen as inherently superior and deserving of those things. Caste divisions can be based on a number of different factors: the U.S.’s caste system is intimately tied to race, for instance, while India’s caste system is based on birthright and bound by the Hindu religion.

Caste Quotes in Caste

The Caste quotes below are all either spoken by Caste or refer to Caste. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
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).
Chapter 2 Quotes

America is an old house. We can never declare the work over. […] When you live in an old house, you may not want to go into the basement after a storm to see what the rains have wrought. Choose not to look, however, at your own peril. The owner of an old house knows that whatever you are ignoring will never go away. Whatever is lurking will fester whether you choose to look or not. Ignorance is no protection from the consequences of inaction.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Old House
Page Number: 15
Explanation and Analysis:

Like other old houses, America has an unseen skeleton, a caste system that is as central to its operation as are the studs and joists that we cannot see in the physical buildings we call home. Caste is the infrastructure of our divisions. It is the architecture of human hierarchy, the subconscious code of instructions for maintaining, in our case, a four-hundred-year-old social order. Looking at caste is like holding the country's X-ray up to the light.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Old House
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:
An Invisible Program Quotes

The great quest in the film series The Matrix involves those humans who awaken to this realization as they search for a way to escape their entrapment. Those who accept their programming get to lead deadened, surface lives enslaved to a semblance of reality. They are captives, safe on the surface, as long as they are unaware of their captivity. […] People who do not know that they are captive will not resist their bondage.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 33-34
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Day after day, the curtain rises on a stage of epic proportions, one that has been running for centuries. The actors wear the costumes of their predecessors and inhabit the roles assigned to them. The people in these roles are not the characters they play, but they have played the roles long enough to incorporate the roles into their very being, to merge the assignment with their inner selves and how they are seen in the world.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 39
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Caste is a living, breathing entity. It is like a corporation that seeks to sustain itself at all costs.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 70
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

The Nazis needed no outsiders to plant the seeds of hatred within them. But in the early years of the regime, when they still had a stake in the appearance of legitimacy and the hope of foreign investment, they were seeking legal prototypes for the caste system they were building. They were looking to move quickly with their plans for racial separation and purity, and knew that the United States was centuries ahead of them with its anti-miscegenation statutes and race-based immigration bans.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker), Adolf Hitler
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

The villagers were not all Nazis, in fact, many Germans were not Nazis. But they followed the Nazi leaders on the radio, waited to hear the latest from Hitler and Goebbels, the Nazis having seized the advantage of this new technology, the chance to reach Germans live and direct in their homes anytime they chose, an intravenous drip to the mind. The people had ingested the lies of an inherent Untermenschen, that these prisoners—Jews, Sinti, homosexuals, opponents of the Reich—were not humans like themselves, and thus the townspeople swept the ash from their steps and carried on with their days.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker), Adolf Hitler
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number One Quotes

The United States and India would become, respectively, the oldest and the largest democracies in human history both built on caste systems undergirded by their reading of the sacred texts of their respective cultures. In both countries, the subordinate castes were consigned to the bottom, seen as deserving of their debasement, owing to the sins of the past.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 104
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number Two Quotes

It is the fixed nature of caste that distinguishes it from class, a term to which it is often compared. Class is an altogether separate measure of one's standing in a society, marked by level of education, income, and occupation, as well as the attendant characteristics, such as accent, taste, and manners, that flow from socioeconomic status. These can be acquired through hard work and ingenuity or lost through poor decisions or calamity. If you can act your way out of it, then it is class, not caste.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 106
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number Three Quotes

Endogamy enforces caste boundaries by forbidding marriage outside of one's group and going so far as to prohibit sexual relations, or even the appearance of romantic interest across caste lines. It builds a firewall between castes and becomes the primary means of keeping resources and affinity within each tier of the caste system. Endogamy, by closing off legal family connection, blocks the chance for empathy or a sense of shared destiny between the castes.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 109
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number Four Quotes

Their exclusion was used to justify their exclusion. Their degraded station justified their degradation. They were consigned to the lowliest, dirtiest jobs and thus were seen as lowly and dirty, and everyone in the caste system absorbed the message of their degradation.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 129
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number Five Quotes

When a house is being built, the single most important piece of the framework is the first wood beam hammered into place to anchor the foundation. That piece is called the mudsill, the sill plate that runs along the base of a house and bears the weight of the entire structure above it. The studs and subfloors, the ceilings and windows, the doors and roofing, all the components that make it a house, are built on top of the mudsill. In a caste system, the mudsill is the bottom caste that everything else rests upon.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Old House
Page Number: 131
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number Six Quotes

Both Nazi Germany and the United States reduced their outgroups, Jews and African-Americans, respectively, to an undifferentiated mass of nameless, faceless scapegoats, the shock absorbers of the collective fears and setbacks of each nation. Germany blamed Jews for the loss of World War I, for the shame and economic straits that befell the country after its defeat and the United States blamed African-Americans for many of its social ills. In both cases, individuals were lumped together for sharing a single, stigmatizing trait, made indistinct and indistinguishable in preparation for the exploitation and atrocities that would be inflicted upon them. Individuals were no longer individuals.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 142
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number Seven Quotes

The crimes of homicide, of rape, and of assault and battery were felonies in the slavery era as they are today in any civil society. They were seen then as wrong, immoral, reprehensible, and worthy of the severest punishment. But the country allowed most any atrocity to be inflicted on the black body.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:
Pillar Number Eight Quotes

From the beginning, the power of caste and the superior status of the dominant group was perhaps never clearer than when the person deemed superior was unquestionably not.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 161
Explanation and Analysis:
Brown Eyes versus Blue Eyes Quotes

An otherwise neutral trait had been converted into a disability. The teacher later switched roles, and the blue-eyed children became the scapegoat caste, with the same caste behavior that had arisen the day before between these artificially constructed upper and lower castes. […]

Classroom performance fell for both groups of students during the few hours that they were relegated to the subordinate caste. The brown-eyed students took twice as long to finish a phonics exercise the day that they were made to feel inferior.

"I watched my students become what I told them they were," [Mrs. Elliott] told NBC News decades later.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker), Mrs. Elliott (speaker), Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Page Number: 169
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

[Tushar and I] had both been miscast, each in our own way, and could see through the delusion that had shaped and restricted us from the other side of our respective caste systems. We had broken from the matrix and were convinced that we could see what others could not and that others could see it, too, if they could awaken from their slumber.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker), Tushar
Page Number: 177
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

If the lower-caste person manages actually to rise above an upper-caste person, the natural human response from someone weaned on their caste's inherent superiority is to perceive a threat to their existence, a heightened sense of unease, of displacement of fear for their very survival. "If the things that I have believed are not true, then might I not be who I thought I was?" The disaffection is more than economic. The malaise is spiritual, psychological, emotional. Who are you if there is no one to be better than?

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 183
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

This was the thievery of caste, stealing the time and psychic resources of the marginalized, draining energy in an already uphill competition. […]

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 223
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

It can lead those down under to absorb into their identities the conditions of their entrapment and to do whatever it takes to distinguish themselves as superior to others in their group, to be first among the lowest.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 238
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

Under the spell of caste, the majors, like society itself, were willing to forgo their own advancement and glory, and resulting profits, if these came at the hands of someone seen as subordinate.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker), Satchel Paige
Page Number: 260
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 22 Quotes

One cannot live in a caste system, breathe its air, without absorbing the message of caste supremacy. The subordinated castes are trained to admire, worship, fear, love, covet, and want to be like those at the center of society, at the top of the hierarchy. In India, it is said that you can try to leave caste, but caste never leaves you.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 289
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

People who appear in places or positions where they are not expected can become foot soldiers in an ongoing quest for respect and legitimacy in a fight they had hoped was long over.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 293
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 27 Quotes

In Germany, displaying the swastika is a crime punishable by up to three years in prison. In the United States, the rebel flag is incorporated into the official state flag of Mississippi.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker), Robert E. Lee
Page Number: 346
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 29 Quotes

Compared to our counterparts in the developed world, America can be a harsh landscape, a less benevolent society than other wealthy nations. It is the price we pay for our caste system. In places with a different history and hierarchy, it is not necessarily seen as taking away from one's own prosperity if the system looks out for the needs of everyone.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 353
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 30 Quotes

For most of his life, he had worn the sacred thread as if it were strands of hair from his head. Removing it amounted to renouncing his high caste, and he considered the consequences, that his family might reject him if they knew. He would have to determine how to manage their knowing when the time came.

He was now born a third time, the shades lifted in a darkened room in his mind.

"It is a fake crown that we wear," he came to realize.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 364
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

In a world without caste, being male or female, light or dark, immigrant or native-born would have no bearing on what anyone was perceived as being capable of. In a world without caste, we would all be invested in the well-being of others in our species if only for our own survival, and recognize that we are in need of one another more than we have been led to believe. […] We would see that, when others suffer, the collective human body is set back from the progression of our species.

A world without caste would set everyone free.

Related Characters: Isabel Wilkerson (speaker)
Page Number: 388
Explanation and Analysis:
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Caste Term Timeline in Caste

The timeline below shows where the term Caste appears in Caste. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Prologue: The Man in the Crowd
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...terror after he fell in love with a Jewish woman, a member of the subordinate caste in the Nazis’ regime. As someone connected to the scapegoated caste, Landmesser could see past... (full context)
Chapter One: The Afterlife of Pathogens
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...primacy. It took place in a country whose rapidly shifting demographics threatened the dominant racial caste in an unspoken hierarchy that had existed since the country was founded. Experts predicted that... (full context)
Chapter Two: An Old House and an Infrared Light
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Like all old houses, the U.S. has an “unseen skeleton”—a caste system that is as central to its operation as wooden beams are to the houses... (full context)
Chapter Three: An American Untouchable
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...colonial rule had inspired his own fight in the U.S. King had read of the caste system in India, and he wanted to meet members of its lowest caste—the Dalit, or... (full context)
An Invisible Program
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...their captivity. Yet many remain unaware of the fact that they’re captives at all. The caste system in the United States, Wilkerson suggests, is similar to the program running the Matrix.... (full context)
Chapter Four: A Long-Running Play and the Emergence of Caste in America
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Before the United States of America was even formed, a caste system was born in the colonies. Initially, one’s religion—not skin color—defined their place in society.... (full context)
Chapter Five: “The Container We Have Built for You”
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...that he would name his firstborn daughter “Miss,” so that no one in the dominant caste would ever be able to deny her the respect that was denied to her forebears. (full context)
Chapter Six: The Measure of Humanity
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...in a universe parallel to this one. On that planet, short people are the dominant caste, and tall people are the subordinate caste. “Shorts” around the world unite against “Talls,” enslaving... (full context)
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Caste is a “living, breathing entity” that enforces structures, rankings, and boundaries on the basis of... (full context)
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People at every level of U.S. society have internalized the caste system in which they live, and what matters is whether one tries to uphold it... (full context)
Chapter Seven: Through the Fog of Delhi to the Parallels in India and America
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...about the differences—and unlikely similarities—between India and the U.S. Both countries are defined by their caste systems, and both employ similar methods of maintaining distinctions between their castes. Though both countries... (full context)
Chapter Eight: The Nazis and the Acceleration of Caste
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...nation they hoped to create. In order to do so, the Nazis turned to the caste system in the United States, determined to glean what they could from its strictness in... (full context)
Chapter Nine: The Evil of Silence
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...cut down. It had to serve as a reminder to the members of the subordinate caste that there were consequences for attempting to escape their station. (full context)
The Foundations of Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents
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Wilkerson writes that there are “pillars” that uphold the belief system of caste. It doesn’t matter whether or not these tenets are true—they are ancient and ingrained, and... (full context)
Pillar Number One: Divine Will and the Laws of Nature
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According to ancient Hindu texts, caste is rooted in the creation myth of the awakening of the universe. “The One” created... (full context)
Pillar Number Two: Heritability
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In order to work, caste systems require the inheritance of a rank and corresponding role at birth. In India, this... (full context)
Pillar Number Three: Endogamy and the Control of Marriage and Mating
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Endogamy, or restricting marriage to people within the same caste, is a measure that’s been taken in every major caste system the world has seen:... (full context)
Pillar Number Four: Purity versus Pollution
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The fourth pillar of caste is the belief that the purity of the dominant caste must be protected from pollution... (full context)
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Members of the dominant caste in the U.S. were taught, from birth, that the members of the subordinate caste were... (full context)
Pillar Number Five: Occupational Hierarchy: The Jatis and the Mudsill
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...mudsill. It is, in Wilkerson’s estimation, the most important piece of the framework. In a caste system, the mudsill is the bottommost caste. Even in the mid-1850s, American politicians like Senator... (full context)
Pillar Number Six: Dehumanization and Stigma
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The dehumanization of a subordinate caste is a fight against truth—yet it is necessary in order to manufacture a caste hierarchy... (full context)
Pillar Number Seven: Terror as Enforcement, Cruelty as a Means of Control
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To keep a group of people in a falsely rigid, subordinate place, the dominant caste must employ psychological and physical violence and terror. Caste structures incentivize the terrorization of the... (full context)
Pillar Number Eight: Inherent Superiority versus Inherent Inferiority
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By creating a presumption of “inborn superiority” in the dominant caste, upper-caste members can control the subordinate castes by making it seem absurd—even criminal—to question the... (full context)
Brown Eyes versus Blue Eyes
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...white—but after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., the teacher wanted to teach her dominant-caste students what it felt like to be judged by something arbitrary. So, one morning, Mrs.... (full context)
Chapter Ten: Central Miscasting
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In December of 2017, Isabel Wilkerson arrived in London to attend a conference on caste. At the convention center, she noticed that there was no one else of African descent... (full context)
Chapter Eleven: Dominant Group Status Threat and the Precarity of the Highest Rung
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...despair,” and they were linked to the most precariously situated members of the U.S.’s dominant caste. Political scientists gave the deaths a name: “dominant group status threat.” In other words, sensing... (full context)
Chapter Twelve: A Scapegoat to Bear the Sins of the World
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...scapegoat is a person or group blamed for causing or attracting misfortune. And in a caste system, the lowest caste is often the scapegoat cast: Jewish people were scapegoated for Germany’s... (full context)
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...day, Black Americans are scapegoated for the problems that disproportionately plague Black communities because of casteism and inequality. Scapegoating blames larger societal ills on those with the least power—and scapegoating always... (full context)
Chapter Fourteen: The Intrusion of Caste in Everyday Life
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...how to prepare his young son for the realities of growing up in the U.S.’s caste system, the son began crying about wanting to drink some juice before eating his vegetables.... (full context)
Chapter Fifteen: The Urgent Necessity of a Bottom Rung
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The greatest threat to a caste system is the success of the lower castes—the idea that members of the bottommost caste... (full context)
Chapter Sixteen: Last Place Anxiety: Packed in a Flooding Basement
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By using the analogy of a high-rise building, Wilkerson suggests that caste places the dominant caste in the penthouse. It places everyone else in descending order on... (full context)
Chapter Seventeen: On the Early Front Lines of Caste
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...of Harvard anthropologists had decided to put their very lives on the line to study caste in the Jim Crow South. Along with white couple Burleigh and Mary Gardner, who were... (full context)
Chapter Nineteen: The Euphoria of Hate
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...extermination of their neighbors and the destruction of neighboring countries. But the dehumanizing pattern of caste explains why Jews, African Americans, and Dalits were all considered so lowly and irrelevant that... (full context)
Chapter Twenty: The Inevitable Narcissism of Caste
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Caste systems center the dominant caste as “the sun around which all other castes revolve.” Because... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-One: The German Girl with the Dark, Wavy Hair
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...had disappeared from German life, hidden away in concentration and death camps. Without a scapegoat caste, Germans became fixated on ranking one another, trying to determine how pure, how Aryan, their... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Two: The Stockholm Syndrome and the Survival of the Subordinate Caste
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Caste requires people at the margins to study the behaviors, protocols, and boundaries of the upper... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Three: Shock Troops on the Borders of Hierarchy
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...of the South—were forced to eat, standing up, in the ship’s pantry. Those in a caste system who rise above their station become “foot soldiers” at the borders of caste hierarchy,... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Four: Cortisol, Telomeres, and the Lethality of Caste
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Caste, Wilkerson suggests, is quite literally killing people. The constant fear and trepidation associated with moving... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Five: A Change in the Script
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...president of the United States, represented the greatest departure from the script of the American caste system in U.S. history. Obama was a Harvard-trained lawyer, a U.S. senator, a Constitutional scholar,... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Six: Turning Point and the Resurgence of Caste
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Caste, however, is a perfectly reasonable explanation for the ascendancy of Donald Trump to the highest... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Seven: The Symbols of Caste
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...lawmakers just found new ways to justify the debasement and enforced servitude of the subordinate caste, such as sharecropping and the creation of the Ku Klux Klan. Confederate monuments sprung up... (full context)
Chapter Twenty-Nine: The Price We Pay for a Caste System
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...incarceration. All of this, Wilkerson suggests, is the price Americans pay for life in a caste system. (full context)
Chapter Thirty: Shedding the Sacred Thread
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Wilkerson shares an anecdote about a man who’d been born to the highest caste in India—the Brahmins—but experienced an awakening. As a child, he’d been anointed in a Brahmin... (full context)
The Radicalization of the Dominant Caste
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...dinner with a longtime family friend of hers who happened to be from the dominant caste. It took them a long time to get any attention from their waiter—even though the... (full context)
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...to get away with making such a scene—and with being so blind to the way casteism works in the first place. But another part of Wilkerson was happy to see her... (full context)
Chapter Thirty-One: The Heart is the Last Frontier
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...a plumbing company because she’d discovered flooding in the basement of her old home. A dominant-caste plumber in a red cap came to her door, and she led him to the... (full context)
Epilogue: A World Without Caste
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...over the course of history, suffered unquantifiable, terrible loss due to the false divisions that caste creates. Eleven million people were killed by the Nazis, nearly one million Americans were killed... (full context)
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...after fleeing the Nazis. He was repulsed and shocked to find that he’d fled one caste system for another. Throughout his life in the U.S., he was outspoken about the horrors... (full context)
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While the demographics of the United States are indeed changing, the subordinate caste is still hundreds of years behind achieving equality with the dominant one. Political and social... (full context)