Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Search
67.3 F
Salt Lake City
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Contests
  • About The Globe
    • Staff
    • Jobs
    • Issue PDFs
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy Policy
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
The Globe The Globe
The Globe The Globe
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Home Lifestyle Campus Happenings Pulitzer Prize winner discusses American caste system at Tanner Forum on Social...
  • News
  • Campus
  • Lifestyle
  • Campus Happenings
  • Don't Miss

Pulitzer Prize winner discusses American caste system at Tanner Forum on Social Ethics

By
Morgan Workman
-
November 16, 2021
0

Salt Lake Community College welcomed Isabel Wilkerson as the keynote speaker at the Tanner Forum on Social Ethics over livestream on Thursday, Nov. 4.

Portrait of Isabel Wilkerson
New York Times bestselling author and Pulitzer Prize winner Isabel Wilkerson spoke about the American caste system at the Tanner Forum on Social Ethics on Nov. 4. (Joe Henson)

Wilkerson’s latest book, “Caste: The Origins of our Discontents,” explores America’s caste system, split along racial lines and perpetuated in the modern day. Wilkerson explained the reason for her heavy use of metaphors in her latest book.

“Metaphors are one of the really effective ways of being able to reach people who otherwise might not be as engaged with the deep and very complex topics,” she said.

The metaphor Wilkerson would use for the state of politics in 2021 is the same one she used to explain 2016 in her book: In 2016, a heat wave hit Siberia so extreme that it melted the upper layers of permafrost to expose reindeer carcasses that died of anthrax in 1941, the result of which affected residents in the region.

“We are still dealing with the reemergence of that [caste system], which has always been here, has been part of our country’s history,” Wilkerson said. “And it has resurfaced in recent years, things that people thought were long buried.”

Later in the interview, during that same session that afternoon, Wilkerson gave some perspective on how recent slavery was still legal in the U.S.

“No adult alive today and very, very few children alive today will be alive at the point at which African Americans will have been free for as long as African Americans were enslaved,” Wilkerson said. “That will not happen until the year 2111. It will not be until the second decade of the 22nd century that African Americans will have experienced freedom for as long as there was not.”

Ways in which our country is still divided on racial lines, according to Wilkerson, are in health care, how children are disciplined in schools, incarceration rates and wealth disparity.

Then, Wilkerson explained that Nazi Germany learned to control racial minorities by researching how the United States discriminated against its marginalized population.

“Nazis sent researchers to the United States to study how the United States had managed to subjugate, control, restrict and stratify its marginalized people,” Wilkerson said. “They looked and studied the Jim Crow South. They studied the ways in which the United States had come up with a way to define race.”

Wilkerson shared a piece of advice for spotting someone who may be perpetuating the American caste system: Be on alert if someone qualifies a statement with, “I’m not a racist,” or claims they cannot be racist because they have a Black friend. To Wilkerson, these statements are a red flag.

Her book, while depressing at times, asserts that there have been fractures in the foundations of racial inequality in America. Wilkerson cited the innate human desire to be free, slaves risking their lives to run away from their captors and the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 as evidence to show that people are rebelling against the system in an effective way.

  • TAGS
  • caste system
  • Caste: The Origins of our Discontents
  • Fall 2021
  • Isabel Wilkerson
  • racial segregation
  • Racism
  • Salt Lake Community College
  • Tanner Forum on Social Ethics
Morgan Workman

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Sign outside the Bruin Brains Undergraduate Research Conference

SLCC conference speaker leaves students with one message: ‘Don’t give up’

Josh Auava'a cleans a room while wearing special protective clothing

SLCC experiencing custodial staff shortage; down 42%

Side view of the INK alumni exhibit

7th SLCC alumni art and design show premieres

Cadet holds folded American flag

Photos: SLCC commemorates Veterans Day with flag ceremony

President Huftalin answers a question

Housing project chief concern at Student Forum

The Globe
ABOUT US
About The Globe
Staff
Jobs
Issue PDFs
FOLLOW US
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • About The Globe
  • Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
© 2025 The Globe