40 research outputs found
Postcoloniality without race? Racial exceptionalism and south-east European cultural studies
The black Dutch feminist Gloria Wekker, assembling past and present everyday expressions of racialized imagination which collectively undermine hegemonic beliefs that white Dutch society has no historic responsibility for racism, writes in her book White Innocence that âone can do postcolonial studies very well without ever critically addressing raceâ (p. 175). Two and a half decades after the adaptation of postcolonial thought to explain aspects of cultural politics during the break-up of Yugoslavia created important tools for understanding the construction of national, regional and socio-economic identities around hierarchical notions of âEuropeâ and âthe Balkansâ in the Yugoslav region and beyond, Wekkerâs observation is still largely true for south-east European studies, where no intervention establishing race and whiteness as categories of analysis has reframed the field like work by Maria Todorova on âbalkanismâ or Milica BakiÄ-Hayden on âsymbolic geographiesâ and ânesting orientalismâ did in the early 1990s. Critical race theorists such as Charles Mills nevertheless argue that âraceâ as a structure of thought and feeling that legitimised colonialism and slavery (and still informs structural white supremacy) involved precisely the kind of essentialised link between people and territory that south-east European cultural theory also critiques: the construction of spatialised hierarchies specifying which peoples and territories could have more or less access to civilisation and modernity. South-east European studiesâ latent racial exceptionalism has some roots in the race-blind anti-colonial solidarities of state socialist internationalism (further intensified for Yugoslavia through the politics of Non-Alignment) but also, this paper suggests, in deeper associations between Europeanness, whiteness and modernity that remain part of the history of âEuropeâ as an idea even if, by the end of the 20th century, they were silenced more often than voiced
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Black Immigrants in the United States and the âCultural Narratives" of Ethnicity
John L. Warfield Center for African and African American Studie
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Race across the Atlantic : mapping racialization in Africa and the African diaspora
textBased primarily on comparative ethnographic research in Accra, Ghana and
Washington, D.C., this dissertation is a multi-sitedâtextual, sociopolitical, and
historicalâinvestigation of processes of racialization as they construct notions of
âBlacknessâ for communities in Africa and the African diaspora. I argue that the
sociohistorical processes of racialization are such that they render analogous the
experiences and relationships of continental Africans and those of African descent in
diaspora. I engage both racial formation and African diaspora theorization to stress
the political and intellectual import of understanding Black (racial) identity
construction within a global context, a context that encompasses not only the
âwesternâ communities of the diaspora, but also the realities of peoples residing in the
geopolitical space of the African continent. My objective in this project is to examine
how racialization works to create global Black identities and the ways these identities
are deployed and understood in a transnational context. The dissertation charts an
âethnography of racializationâ and each chapter examines a specific site of racial
identity formation. This project challenges the commonsense intellectual assumption
that Africa and its peoples on the continent do not actively participate (in this
contemporary (post)colonial moment) in the global discourses and practices of racial
identity formation. It also shows that, as a global and hegemonic phenomenon,
racialization significantly links Africa to its diaspora.
This dissertation initiates a dialogue that I hope will help us rethink how we
conceptualize the African diaspora and anthropological/ethnographic practice by
delineating the central place of race in structuring the experiences of all âracializedas-Blackâ
peoples. Thus, the dissertation is significant for African Studies, African
Diaspora Studies, racial formation theory, transnational migration studies, and, more
generally, anthropological theory and practice. It redirects diaspora theorization to
include identity processes in contemporary Africa and, furthermore, it foregrounds
the practices of race and racialization that, South Africa aside, have received less
attention in the historiography and ethnographic studies of Africa than other
processes of identification.Anthropolog