Skip to Main Content
  • Instructor Site
  • Student Store
  • Canada StoreCanada
Student store Macmillan learning linkStudent Store Student store Macmillan learning linkStudent Store
    • I'M AN INSTRUCTOR

    • I'M A STUDENT
  • Student store Help link
  • search

    Find what you need to succeed.

    search icon
  • Shopping Cart
    0
    • Canada StoreCanada
  • Who We Are

    Who We Are

    back
    • Who We Are
  • Student Benefits

    Student Benefits

    back
    • Special Offers
    • Rent and Save
    • Flexible Formats
    • College Quest Blog
  • Discipline

    Discipline

    back
    • Astronomy Biochemistry Biology Chemistry College Success Communication Economics Electrical Engineering English Environmental Science Geography Geology History Mathematics Music & Theater Nutrition and Health Philosophy & Religion Physics Psychology Sociology Statistics Value
  • Digital Products

    Digital Products

    back
    • Achieve
    • E-books
    • iClicker Student App (Student Response System)
  • Support

    Support

    back
    • Get Help
    • Rental and Returns
    • Support Community
    • Student Options Explained

Cover: Rereading America, 13th Edition by Gary Colombo; Uzzie T. Cannon; Robert Cullen; Bonnie Lisle
Rental FAQs

GET FREE SHIPPING!

Use Promo Code SHIPFREE at Step 4 of checkout.

*Free Shipping only applicable to US orders. Restrictions apply.

Rereading America

Instant Access
info icon

Thirteenth  Edition|©2026  Gary Colombo; Uzzie T. Cannon; Robert Cullen; Bonnie Lisle

  • Format
E-book from $41.99

ISBN:9781319594800

Take notes, add highlights, and download our mobile-friendly e-books.

$41.99
Subscribe until 06/03/2026

$51.99
Paperback from $44.99

ISBN:9781319474492

Read and study old-school with our bound texts.

$44.99
Rent until 03/08/2026

Includes eBook Trial Access

(14-day)


$48.99
Rent until 04/17/2026

Includes eBook Trial Access

(14-day)


$109.99

Includes eBook Trial Access

(14-day)

  • About
  • Digital Options
  • Contents
  • Authors

About

Rethink the Stories You’ve Been Told


Rereading America challenges the cultural myths that shape how we think about justice, education, success, gender, race, and more. With powerful readings from writers like Michelle Alexander, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Jia Tolentino, this book invites you to connect your own experiences to bigger cultural forces—and to question what’s often taken for granted.

You’ll read essays that offer new ways of seeing the world. You’ll also find questions, visuals, and activities to help you dig deeper and join the conversation. In the process, you’ll develop the critical thinking, reading, and writing skills essential to success in college.  

Digital Options

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

Contents

Table of Contents


Chapter 1. Equal Protection: The Myth of Justice
  • Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow
  • Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Case for Reparations
  • Meredith Broussard, Machine Fairness and the Justice System
  • Dina Gilio-Whitaker, The Land Before Laws
  • Sheryll Cashin, Loving Beyond Boundaries
  • Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco and Carola Suárez-Orozco, How Immigrants Become “Other”
Chapter 2. Learning Power: The Myth of Education and Empowerment
  • John Taylor Gatto, Against School
  • Mike Rose, “I Just Wanna Be Average”
  • Nikole Hannah-Jones, Choosing a School for My Daughter in a Segregated City
  • Tara Westover, Freshman Year
  • Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt, Coddling Fragility
  • John Agresto, A Liberal Education in Its Fullness
Chapter 3. The Wired West: Myths of Progress on the Tech Frontier
  • Joy Buolamwini, AI Is Not Neutral
  • Jean M. Twenge, Has the Smartphone Destroyed a Generation?
  • Sam Dean and Johana Bhuiyan, Why Are Black and Latino People Still Kept Out of the Tech Industry?
  • Bruce Schneier, How We Sold Our Souls—and More—to the Internet Giants
  • Ashley Shew, Against Technoableism: Rethinking Who Needs Improvement
  • Yuval Noah Harari, AI Enters the Information Chain
  • Tatiana Schlossberg, The Tech We Throw Away
Chapter 4. Money and Success: The Myth of Individual Opportunity
  • Gregory Mantsios, Class in America
  • Alan Aja, Daniel Bustillo, William Darity Jr., and Darrick Hamilton, From a Tangle of Pathology to a Race-Fair America
  • Richard Reeves, Opportunity Hoarding
  • Morgan Housel, Luck and Risk
  • Jia Tolentino, The Gig Economy Celebrates Working Yourself to Death
  • Jennifer M. Silva, Adulthood: When the Struggle Becomes Real
Chapter 5. True Women and Real Men: Myths of Gender
  • Lisa Wade and Myra Marx Ferree, How to Do Gender
  • Allan G. Johnson, From The Gender Knot: “Patriarchy”
  • Gina Rippon, The Gendered Waters in Which We Swim—The Pink and Blue Tsunami
  • Judith Butler, Who’s Afraid of Gender?
  • Julia Serano, Blind Spots: On Subconscious Sex and Gender Entitlement
  • Ruth Padawer, Sisterhood Is Complicated
  • Ellen K. Pao, From Reset: My Fight for Inclusion and Lasting Change
Chapter 6. Created Equal: Myths of Race
  • Isabel Wilkerson, The Emergence of Caste in America
  • Linda Holtzman and Leon Sharpe, Theories and Constructs of Race
  • Ibram X. Kendi, Definitions
  • Robin DiAngelo, How Does Race Shape the Lives of White People?
  • Rosalind S. Chou and Joe R. Feagin, The Reality of Asian American Oppression
  • Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz and Dina Gilio-Whitaker, Myths About Native Americans
  • Erika Lee, Islamophobia

Authors

Gary Colombo

Gary Colombo is professor emeritus of English and ESL at Los Angeles City College. He has also published Mind Readings: An Anthology for Writers (2002), and with Bonnie Lisle and Sandra Mano, Frame Work: Culture, Storytelling and College Writing (1997), both for Bedford/St. Martins.


Robert Cullen

Robert Cullen is professor emeritus of English at San Jose State University, where he taught a wide range of courses in writing, rhetoric, composition pedagogy, and American literature..


Bonnie Lisle

Bonnie Lisle teaches in the UCLA Writing Programs. With Gary Colombo and Sandra Mano, she is the author of Frame Work: Culture, Storytelling, and College Writing (Bedford/St. Martins, 1997).


Uzzie Cannon

Uzzie T. Cannon is Associate Dean, Foundational Learning, at Howard Community College.She earned a Ph.D. from The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where she specialized in African American Literature and Composition and Pedagogy. She went on to earn a second M.A. in Digital Humanities from Loyola University Chicago.

As a teaching scholar, Dr. Cannon enjoys teaching first-year composition, where she sharpens students’ critical reading, thinking, and writing skills. In her literary research, she explores the intersection of race, gender, and narrative form in contemporary African American fiction. She has published in journals such as African American Review and CEA Critic and has published book chapters on Black masculinity.

Dr. Cannon also loves building digital humanities tools and applications for research in the humanities. When not teaching or writing, she loves to travel and to create black-and-white images in photography.


Rethink the Stories You’ve Been Told


Rereading America challenges the cultural myths that shape how we think about justice, education, success, gender, race, and more. With powerful readings from writers like Michelle Alexander, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Jia Tolentino, this book invites you to connect your own experiences to bigger cultural forces—and to question what’s often taken for granted.

You’ll read essays that offer new ways of seeing the world. You’ll also find questions, visuals, and activities to help you dig deeper and join the conversation. In the process, you’ll develop the critical thinking, reading, and writing skills essential to success in college.  

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

Table of Contents


Chapter 1. Equal Protection: The Myth of Justice
  • Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow
  • Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Case for Reparations
  • Meredith Broussard, Machine Fairness and the Justice System
  • Dina Gilio-Whitaker, The Land Before Laws
  • Sheryll Cashin, Loving Beyond Boundaries
  • Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco and Carola Suárez-Orozco, How Immigrants Become “Other”
Chapter 2. Learning Power: The Myth of Education and Empowerment
  • John Taylor Gatto, Against School
  • Mike Rose, “I Just Wanna Be Average”
  • Nikole Hannah-Jones, Choosing a School for My Daughter in a Segregated City
  • Tara Westover, Freshman Year
  • Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt, Coddling Fragility
  • John Agresto, A Liberal Education in Its Fullness
Chapter 3. The Wired West: Myths of Progress on the Tech Frontier
  • Joy Buolamwini, AI Is Not Neutral
  • Jean M. Twenge, Has the Smartphone Destroyed a Generation?
  • Sam Dean and Johana Bhuiyan, Why Are Black and Latino People Still Kept Out of the Tech Industry?
  • Bruce Schneier, How We Sold Our Souls—and More—to the Internet Giants
  • Ashley Shew, Against Technoableism: Rethinking Who Needs Improvement
  • Yuval Noah Harari, AI Enters the Information Chain
  • Tatiana Schlossberg, The Tech We Throw Away
Chapter 4. Money and Success: The Myth of Individual Opportunity
  • Gregory Mantsios, Class in America
  • Alan Aja, Daniel Bustillo, William Darity Jr., and Darrick Hamilton, From a Tangle of Pathology to a Race-Fair America
  • Richard Reeves, Opportunity Hoarding
  • Morgan Housel, Luck and Risk
  • Jia Tolentino, The Gig Economy Celebrates Working Yourself to Death
  • Jennifer M. Silva, Adulthood: When the Struggle Becomes Real
Chapter 5. True Women and Real Men: Myths of Gender
  • Lisa Wade and Myra Marx Ferree, How to Do Gender
  • Allan G. Johnson, From The Gender Knot: “Patriarchy”
  • Gina Rippon, The Gendered Waters in Which We Swim—The Pink and Blue Tsunami
  • Judith Butler, Who’s Afraid of Gender?
  • Julia Serano, Blind Spots: On Subconscious Sex and Gender Entitlement
  • Ruth Padawer, Sisterhood Is Complicated
  • Ellen K. Pao, From Reset: My Fight for Inclusion and Lasting Change
Chapter 6. Created Equal: Myths of Race
  • Isabel Wilkerson, The Emergence of Caste in America
  • Linda Holtzman and Leon Sharpe, Theories and Constructs of Race
  • Ibram X. Kendi, Definitions
  • Robin DiAngelo, How Does Race Shape the Lives of White People?
  • Rosalind S. Chou and Joe R. Feagin, The Reality of Asian American Oppression
  • Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz and Dina Gilio-Whitaker, Myths About Native Americans
  • Erika Lee, Islamophobia
Headshot of Gary Colombo

Gary Colombo

Gary Colombo is professor emeritus of English and ESL at Los Angeles City College. He has also published Mind Readings: An Anthology for Writers (2002), and with Bonnie Lisle and Sandra Mano, Frame Work: Culture, Storytelling and College Writing (1997), both for Bedford/St. Martins.


Headshot of Robert Cullen

Robert Cullen

Robert Cullen is professor emeritus of English at San Jose State University, where he taught a wide range of courses in writing, rhetoric, composition pedagogy, and American literature..


Headshot of Bonnie Lisle

Bonnie Lisle

Bonnie Lisle teaches in the UCLA Writing Programs. With Gary Colombo and Sandra Mano, she is the author of Frame Work: Culture, Storytelling, and College Writing (Bedford/St. Martins, 1997).


Headshot of Uzzie Cannon

Uzzie Cannon

Uzzie T. Cannon is Associate Dean, Foundational Learning, at Howard Community College.She earned a Ph.D. from The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where she specialized in African American Literature and Composition and Pedagogy. She went on to earn a second M.A. in Digital Humanities from Loyola University Chicago.

As a teaching scholar, Dr. Cannon enjoys teaching first-year composition, where she sharpens students’ critical reading, thinking, and writing skills. In her literary research, she explores the intersection of race, gender, and narrative form in contemporary African American fiction. She has published in journals such as African American Review and CEA Critic and has published book chapters on Black masculinity.

Dr. Cannon also loves building digital humanities tools and applications for research in the humanities. When not teaching or writing, she loves to travel and to create black-and-white images in photography.


Related Titles

Find Your School

Select Your Discipline

Select Your Course

search icon
No schools matching your search criteria were found !
No active courses are available for this school.
No active courses are available for this discipline.
Can't find your course?

Find Your Course

Confirm Your Course

Enter the course ID provided by your instructor
search icon

We found the following course. Does this look correct?

We found the following course. To properly enroll in your course, please use the link provided in your school's course system (LMS Example: Canvas, Blackboard, D2L, Etc).

Your Achieve account needs to be linked with your school's account.

Find Your School

Select Your Course

No schools matching your search criteria were found.
(Optional)
Select Your Course
No Courses found for your selection.
  • macmillanlearning.com
  • // Privacy Notice
  • // Ads & Cookies
  • // Terms of Purchase/Rental
  • // Terms of Use
  • // Piracy
  • // Products
  • // Site Map
  • // Customer Support
Student store Footer Logo
  • macmillan learning facebook
  • macmillan learning twitter
  • macmillan learning youtube
  • macmillan learning linkedin
  • macmillan learning instagram
We are processing your request. Please wait...