The Psychopathy of Whiteness: The Epigenetics of Anti-Blackness, Malignant Narcissism, and Collective Diabolical Antisocial Personality Disorder (A ... Race, and Racism in America--and Beyond) Paperback – Large Print, February 24, 2026

★★★★★ 4.2 86 reviews

$22.20
Price when purchased online
Free shipping Free 30-day returns

Sold and shipped by school.anne.education
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here.
$22.20
Price when purchased online
Free shipping Free 30-day returns

How do you want your item?
You get 30 days free! Choose a plan at checkout.
Shipping
Arrives May 7
Free
Pickup
Check nearby
Delivery
Not available

Sold and shipped by school.anne.education
Free 30-day returns Details

Product details

Management number 219231751 Release Date 2026/05/03 List Price $8.88 Model Number 219231751
Category

The Psychopathy of Whiteness is a rigorous, unsettling, and necessary work that reframes racism not as a moral failure or social aberration, but as a pathological system of thought, law, and identity—one that has been psychologically, legally, and biologically cultivated over centuries.Building on the author’s prior work, Diagnosing Whiteness & Anti-Blackness, this book advances a bold and original thesis: whiteness functions as a socially sanctioned psychopathy, sustained through denial, projection, dissociation, and moral inversion. Far from being merely an ideology, whiteness operates as a psycho-legal and neuro-political condition, shaping institutions, governing behavior, and reproducing itself through law, religion, education, media, and state violence.Drawing from history, law, psychology, neuroscience, epigenetics, and Black radical intellectual traditions, The Psychopathy of Whiteness traces how European colonial conquest, Christian theology, and Western legal systems fused to produce a civilization organized around domination—and how that domination required the systematic destruction of empathy, accountability, and moral coherence.The book argues that American law, particularly the U.S. Supreme Court, has functioned as a central organ in this pathology—repeatedly reengineering racial hierarchy under the guise of neutrality, federalism, and “colorblindness.” From Reconstruction to Jim Crow, from mass incarceration to contemporary voter suppression, the text demonstrates how whiteness continually reinvents itself to evade accountability while preserving power.Crucially, the book does not treat whiteness as synonymous with white people. Instead, it defines whiteness as a faith system and identity structure—one that demands innocence, suppresses historical truth, and requires Black suffering to sustain its moral self-image. Through this lens, phenomena such as white fragility, backlash politics, racialized policing, and the erosion of civil rights are not anomalies but predictable symptoms of an untreated disorder.One of the book’s most original contributions is its integration of neurobiology and epigenetics, arguing that racial violence has not only shaped institutions but has rewired nervous systems across generations—producing inherited hypervigilance in Black communities and inherited dissociation and entitlement in white populations. In this sense, racism is not only structural or cultural; it is embodied.The final sections of the book move from diagnosis to prescription. Rejecting shallow reforms and symbolic gestures, The Psychopathy of Whiteness calls for clinical-level interventions at the individual, institutional, and national levels—what the author terms racial reckoning, repair-ations, and negotiated power transfer. Healing, the book insists, is not possible without truth, accountability, and material repair.Unflinching, interdisciplinary, and morally precise, The Psychopathy of Whiteness positions itself at the intersection of critical race theory, political psychology, and cultural diagnosis. It challenges readers—particularly those invested in liberal innocence and incremental reform—to confront an uncomfortable reality: that the greatest barrier to justice in America is not ignorance, but a civilization structured to protect itself from knowing.This book is not written to comfort. It is written to name the disease, expose its mechanisms, and ask whether humanity is willing to survive it. Read more

ISBN13 979-8990688292
Language English
Publisher Dante King
Dimensions 6 x 0.95 x 9 inches
Item Weight 1.11 pounds
Reading age 15 - 18 years
Print length 420 pages
Publication date February 24, 2026

Correction of product information

If you notice any omissions or errors in the product information on this page, please use the correction request form below.

Correction Request Form

Customer ratings & reviews

4.2 out of 5
★★★★★
86 ratings | 35 reviews
How item rating is calculated
View all reviews
5 stars
78% (67)
4 stars
6% (5)
3 stars
3% (3)
2 stars
2% (2)
1 star
11% (9)
Sort by

There are currently no written reviews for this product.