Shopping Cart

We want to direct you to the right website. Please tell us where you live.

(This is a one-time message unless you reset your location.)

Available as a ZIP file containing individual MP3 files.
Click here for more information.

(Also available in print and/or ebook formats.)
Audio (mp3)
$19.99 USD
Publisher: New Society Publishers
Pub. Date: 2004-04-01
ISBN: 9781772560107
Format: Audiobook
Running Time: 5h 42m
Narrated By: Richard Newman
BISAC: EDUCATION / Multicultural Education

Somebodies and Nobodies (Audiobook)

Overcoming the Abuse of Rank

by Robert W. Fuller narrated by Richard Newman

In the on-going attempts to overcome racism and sexism in North America today, we are overlooking another kind of discrimination that is no less damaging and equally unjustifiable. It is a form of injustice that everyone knows, but no one sees: discrimination based on rank. Low rank-signifying weakness, vulnerability, and the absence of power-marks you for abuse in much the same way that race, religion, gender, and sexual orientation have long done.

When discrimination is race-based, we call it racism; when it's gender-based, we call it sexism. By analogy, rank-based discrimination might be called "rankism." Somebodies and Nobodies explains our reluctance to confront rankism, and argues that abuse based on power differences is no more justified than abuse based on color or gender differences. It shows where analyses based on identity fall short and, using dozens of examples to illustrate the argument, traces many forms of injustice and unfairness to rankism.

Somebodies and Nobodies unmasks rankism as The Feminine Mystique unmasked sexism. It demythologizes the prevailing social consensus-the "Somebody Mystique"-to demonstrate the pervasiveness and corrosiveness of rankism in our personal lives and social institutions. The book introduces new language and concepts that illuminate the subtle, often dysfunctional workings of power in our social interactions. It presents rankism as the last hurdle on the long road from aristocracy to a true meritocracy, brings into focus a dignitarian revolution that is already taking shape, and offers a preview of post-rankist society.

About the Author

Robert Fuller taught physics at Columbia University in New York, where he co-authored the classic text Mathematics for Classical and Quantum Physics. He then served as president of Oberlin College and, subsequently, worked internationally as a 'citizen diplomat' to promote democracy in developing nations. He has four children, and lives in Berkeley, California.



The Interfaith Alternative

Embracing Spiritual Diversity

by Reverend Steven Greenebaum


The Joy of Conflict Resolution

Transforming Victims, Villains and Heroes in the Workplace and at Home

by Gary Harper


Tales from the Sustainable Underground

A Wild Journey with People Who Care More about the Planet than the Law

by Stephen Hren


Our Ecological Footprint

Reducing Human Impact on the Earth

by Mathis Wackernagel and William Rees


Enough Blood Shed

101 Solutions to Violence, Terror and War

by Mary-Wynne Ashford and Guy Dauncey