Race Inquiry Digest (Aug 30) – The Week’s Top Stories

The Weekend Edition of Race Inquiry Digest features the top stories from the two previous Digests published during the week.  Click here for earlier Digests. 

Editor’s Note: W. E. B. Du Bois: The Color Line and the Wages of Whiteness

At the dawn of the twentieth century, W. E. B. Du Bois announced in The Souls of Black Folk (1903) that “the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line.” For Du Bois, the “color line” was not confined to the United States. It stretched across Africa under colonial rule, into Asia under European domination, and throughout the Americas under slavery and segregation. It was, in his view, the defining moral and political fault line of modern civilization.

Yet Du Bois did not stop at diagnosing the existence of the color line. By the 1930s, in Black Reconstruction in America (1935), he probed more deeply into why this system endured. He posed a pressing question: why did poor whites, who often had little economic advantage, fail to join forces with enslaved or later freed Black laborers to challenge the power of elites? His answer was the concept of the “wages of whiteness.” Even when denied material prosperity, poor whites were compensated with a different kind of reward: a “public and psychological wage.” They were granted the social status of being “white,” access to public spaces and institutions denied to Black people, the right to vote and exercise civic power, and above all, the sense of superiority over a subordinated group. These wages cost the ruling elite little, yet they secured the loyalty of white laborers and prevented the formation of interracial solidarity.

Together, these two concepts form a coherent analysis of racial power. The color line describes the boundary that divides humanity into dominant and dominated groups. The wages of whiteness explain why that boundary persists, even against the economic interests of many who live just above it. For Du Bois, race was not merely a matter of prejudice or individual attitudes. It was a system of structured inequality, held in place by both tangible privileges and psychological rewards, designed to sustain white supremacy.

Du Bois’s insight remains profoundly relevant. The color line continues to shape American politics, from immigration regimes, attacks on DEI and Black history, to persistent economic disparities. The wages of whiteness still operate in the subtle and not-so-subtle privileges that attach to whiteness, sustaining divisions that prevent broader coalitions for justice. Together, these concepts illuminate not only how racial inequality has endured but also what must be dismantled to achieve genuine democracy: the belief that whiteness itself is a form of property and power worth defending.

The Week’s Top Stories

Political / Social

Trump Is Building His Own Paramilitary Force. By Ezra Klein / NYT podcast  Read more and listen here 

The spirit of Old Dixie rises in D.C. By Colbert I. King / Wash Post   Read more 

Trump’s redistricting push could bring decades of Republican rule to the US House. By David Morgan / Reuters  Read more 

Lisa Cook, Who Broke Ground at the Fed, Faces Attack by Trump. By Ben Casselman / NYT  Read more 

Education

Some Programs for Black Students Become ‘Illegal D.E.I.’ Under Trump. By Dana Goldstein / NYT  Read more 

Justice department backs lawsuit seeking to end grants for hispanic-serving colleges, calling them unconstitutional. By CBS News  Read more 

World

With Moves on West Bank and Gaza City, Israel Defies Global Outcry. By Lara Jakes / NYT  Read more 

Here’s what Russia and Ukraine have demanded to end the war. By Sammy Westfall and Mary Ilyushina / Wash Post  Read more 

Ethics / Morality / Religion

At conference, pastors address racism in their churches as momentum fades. By Fiona Andre / RNS  Read more 

He was a child refugee. Now he’s a bishop navigating Trump’s deportation push. By Michelle Boorstein / Wash Post   Read more 

Historical / Cultural

How the Irish Liberator helped liberate America’s enslaved. By Christian E. O’Connell / Wash Post  Read more 

The Meaning of Trump’s Attack on the Smithsonian. By Clint Smith / The Atlantic Read more 

Trump Wants to Make Art Into a Tool of the State. By Barry Schwabsky / The Nation  Read more 

Sports

2025 US Open a celebration of Althea Gibson. By Jerry Bembry / Andscape  Read more 

Kenny Lofton helps remember Black baseball’s Cleveland Buckeyes. By Justice B. Hill / Andscape  Read more 

Venus Williams’s comeback was about playing healthy again. Call it a win. By Ava Wallace / Wash Post  Read more 

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