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Focusing on one of the most significant studies of race in US history—Gunnar Myrdal’s An American Dilemma (1944)—White Philanthropy argues that An American Dilemma should be remembered as a project with great dialogue and intent between its funder, Carnegie Corporation of New York, and its author, Gunnar Myrdal, and a project whose author largely delivered on the funder’s intentions. In the 1920s and 1930s, Carnegie Corporation—both as an institution rooted in Andrew Carnegie’s vision for international peace and under the leadership of President Frederick Keppel—was intent on helping white policymakers solidify a white Anglo-American world order. As White Philanthropy underscores, An American Dilemma was linked to The Poor White Problem in South Africa (1932) and An African Survey (1938) as part of Carnegie Corporation’s plan in the first half of the twentieth century to further solidify white Anglo-American rule and Black subjection across the Atlantic through its funding of comprehensive studies in the social sciences.
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