'Historians rarely offer such a thorough and powerfully accurate account of white supremacy in a digestible and succinct text as John Broich has written. White Supremacy: A Short History is a tremendous resource for scholars and students alike. Broich succeeds in taking readers through a journey over the centuries of racial thinking drawing their attention to horrors of white violence and debilitating proliferation of white supremacist ideology within the United States and Europe. Highly recommended.' Tommy J. Curry, author of Another white Man's Burden
'John Broich expertly distils a vast literature on race, slavery and imperialism into a brisk and bracing narrative which is impossible to ignore. White Supremacy is a wide-ranging, highly readable and impressively concise account of the toxic idea which continues to distort our world.' Nicholas Guyatt, author of Bind Us Apart: How Enlightened Americans Invented Racial Segregation
'This is an excellent and much-needed book. It is a wonderful antidote to the raft of popular works on racism that concentrate on contemporary dynamics in a particular country, with only cursory historical perspectives. John Broich argues passionately that 'white supremacy' is an historical global category that was, and is, contingent, and can, therefore, be dismantled.' James Renton, editor of Islamophobia and Surveillance: Genealogies of a Global Order