"A robust dissection of how educational racial inequality is reproduced under rosy conditions. Staggering in both facts and analysis, Poison in the Ivy will make you jump and twitch, but is so thorough that it guarantees not to leave you itching for more."
~Matthew W. Hughey, author of White Bound: Nationalists, Antiracists, and the Shared Meanings of Race
"Poison in the Ivy is more than a study of how students at highly selective universities interact along racial lines; the book’s insights reach far beyond to the current state of racial inequality more generally. Byrd examines a group of people – those educated at elite institutions – often held up as a model of sophisticated and liberal racial attitudes. His careful analysis raises important questions about their actual skills with understanding and navigating current racial realities. Given that these graduates tend to hold high powered positions in the world post-college, Byrd’s study offers a sobering forecast of what to expect in the years to come. This is an important book that scholars of race & ethnicity, higher education, and inequality more generally should read immediately."
~Amanda Lewis, author of Race in the Schoolyard: Negotiating the Color-line in Classrooms and Communities
"Drawing on decades of social science research as well as original analyses of campus race relations, W. Carson Byrd, an assistant professor of pan-African studies at the University of Louisville, paints a bleak picture in his new book, Poison in the Ivy"
~Nick Roll, Inside Higher Ed
~Choice
"Byrd’s analysis convincingly demonstrates that understanding contact alone is insufficient if we do not consider how that context may imbue particular kinds of meanings to those interactions that can enhance or undermine the impact of cross-racial contact. Such insights are important not only to our understanding of higher education but racial inequality more broadly. Without attention to these issues, racial inequality may be perpetuated for decades to come."
~American Journal of Sociology
"We are indebted to Byrd for his exploration of the murky social undercurrents of under-graduate life. He documents how the gap between students of different racial groups that begins at home grows into a chasm in college. Those of us who venture to campus—whether as students, staff, or faculty—should take note of Byrd’s somber and sobering call."
~Contemporary Sociology
"Poison in the Ivy definitively demonstrates that racial attitudes, relationships and outcomes do not simply result from personal choices, but instead are deeply rooted in centuries-old patterns. Economic, political, historical and institutional realities can—and too often do—thwart the best intentioned, "feel good" efforts to change structured racial inequality in America by simply changing individual attitudes and behaviors."
~Review of Higher Education