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This book began, as perhaps many books do, in dereliction of duty. Kinder was spending the academic year 1994–95 on leave at Stanford University. Freed from administrative and teaching responsibilities at the University of Michigan, Kinder's one assignment for the year was to complete a chapter for the fourth edition of The Handbook of Social Psychology. He did not. (Eventually he did—very eventually; Kinder thanks, one more time, Daniel Gilbert, Susan Fiske, and Gardner Lindzey, the editors of the Handbook, for their patience.) Instead, Kinder spent the fall rummaging through Stanford's libraries, reading up on the subject of ethnocentrism.
The subject was of interest, at least to Kinder, because of a puzzling result he was about to report with Lynn Sanders in their book, Divided by Color (1996). The puzzling result was this: the resentment some white Americans feel toward black Americans figures heavily into their views, not just on affirmative action or school desegregation, but on welfare reform, capital punishment, urban unrest, family leave, sexual harassment, gay rights, immigration, spending on defense, and more. In assessing resentments directed specifically at black Americans, Kinder and Sanders seem to have tapped into a broader hostility, one that might be called ethnocentric.
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