Theodore W. Allen | |
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Born | Theodore William Allen August 23, 1919 Indianapolis, Indiana, United States |
Died | January 19, 2005 Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York, USA | (aged 85)
Occupation | Writer, communist activist, union worker |
Language | English |
Nationality | American |
Subjects | Class struggle, postcolonial studies, whiteness studies |
Theodore William Allen (August 23, 1919 – January 19, 2005) was an American independent scholar, writer, and activist,[1] best known for his pioneering writings since the 1960s on white skin privilege and the origin of white identity. His major theoretical work The Invention of the White Race was published in two volumes: Racial Oppression and Social Control (1994) and The Origin of Racial Oppression in Anglo-America (1997). The central ideas of this opus however, appeared in much earlier works such as his seminal Class Struggle and the Origin of Racial Slavery: The Invention of the White Race, published as a pamphlet in 1975, and in expanded form the following year. He claimed that the notion of white race was invented as "a ruling class social control formation."[2]
Allen did research for the next quarter century to expand and document his ideas, particularly on the alleged relation of white supremacy to the working class.