"Throughout American history, most white folk have refused to acknowledge the depth, breadth, and power of whiteness. But not Chris Driscoll. In this provocative and searching book, he looks into the heart of whiteness and finds what'so many women and men of color have seen before: pain, death, and deception. Part history, part philosophy, and part theology, White Lies contains loads of truth."
Edward Blum, San Diego State University, USA
"In this provocative new book, Driscoll 'sights, cites, and sites' white religion, drawing it into focus in an effort better to address the ways that whiteness functions religiously in America today. Suggesting that 'white religion' is a racially/religiously inflected inability to accept human limits, Driscoll mines existentialist, anthropological, and narrative sources to point us away from a paralytic cultural fear of death, toward a hopeful twilight of the (white) gods."
Laurel C. Schneider, Vanderbilt University, USA
"Responding to the growing visibility of mainstream violence directed to black bodies, White Lies performs a high-wire dance between philosophy and anthropology, God and idol, whiteness and its own possible 'dying' in the fraught space of America."
James W. Perkinson, Ecumenical Theological Seminary, USA
"White lies is a brilliant thought-provoking interruption of our god-idols – critical theory at its best, empowering us to go beyond white religion."
Jürgen Manemann, Hanover Institute for Philosophical Research, Germany
"Recommended"
B. Weston, Centre College in CHOICE
"Throughout American history, most white folk have refused to acknowledge the depth, breadth, and power of whiteness. But not Chris Driscoll. In this provocative and searching book, he looks into the heart of whiteness and finds what'so many women and men of color have seen before: pain, death, and deception. Part history, part philosophy, and part theology, White Lies contains loads of truth."
Edward Blum, San Diego State University, USA
"In this provocative new book, Driscoll 'sights, cites, and sites' white religion, drawing it into focus in an effort better to address the ways that whiteness functions religiously in America today. Suggesting that 'white religion' is a racially/religiously inflected inability to accept human limits, Driscoll mines existentialist, anthropological, and narrative sources to point us away from a paralytic cultural fear of death, toward a hopeful twilight of the (white) gods."
Laurel C. Schneider, Vanderbilt University, USA
"Responding to the growing visibility of mainstream violence directed to black bodies, White Lies performs a high-wire dance between philosophy and anthropology, God and idol, whiteness and its own possible 'dying' in the fraught space of America."
James W. Perkinson, Ecumenical Theological Seminary, USA
"White lies is a brilliant thought-provoking interruption of our god-idols – critical theory at its best, empowering us to go beyond white religion."
Jürgen Manemann, Hanover Institute for Philosophical Research, Germany