Softcover edition
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Author | Rich Benjamin |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Subject | Race and ethnicity in the United States, white flight |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Hyperion Books |
Publication date
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October 6, 2009 |
Media type | Print, e-book |
Pages | 354 pages |
ISBN |
Searching for Whitopia: An Improbable Journey to the Heart of White America is a 2009 non-fiction book by Rich Benjamin.
In May 2010, Benjamin briefly summarized his experiences in a TED talk.
African American journalist Rich Benjamin documents his journeys to find out why more and more white Americans move to small towns and areas that are, for the most part, white, and to explain why Whitopias are growing and what it means for the United States.
Benjamin mounted a two-year tour of the United States, covering 26,907 miles (43,303 km), looking for "Whitopias", which he defined as:
He spent several months in three such areas: St. George, Utah, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, and Forsyth County, Georgia (north of Atlanta). In each case, he generated a master plan to thoroughly immerse himself in the community's core, with lists of the power brokers, the important groups, and the significant events. He tried to volunteer or involve himself with those people and groups.
In St. George, Benjamin rented a house (over the telephone) in a gated community ("La Entrada"). He took up golfing, fishing, and poker ("Texas hold 'em"). He was generally welcomed in every instance, and learned that the dominant topic in St. George was illegal immigration; a local group had been organized to fight immigration, and they held regular rallies.
In Idaho, Benjamin rented (again, over the telephone) a resort cabin ("Almost Heaven") on the lake. He found a significant number of retired LAPD officers living there, and also found a significant number of gun owners (he learned to shoot a pistol at the local gun range). He spent a three-day retreat (the only non-Aryan journalist in the group) at the Council of Aryan Nations compound. He was told that the group is not "white-supremacy"; they are "white-segregation" - they merely don't want to live in close proximity to non-Aryan people. He noted the preponderance of Confederate flags (he counted more Confederate flags than black people in the city). He was also told that there were more gun stores than service stations in the area.