What does it mean to be white? This remains the question at large in the continued effort to examine how white racial identity is constructed and how systems of white privilege operate in everyday life. White Out brings together the original work of leading scholars across the disciplines of sociology, philosophy, history, and anthropology to give readers an important and cutting-edge study of "whiteness."
What does it mean to be white? This remains the question at large in the continued effort to examine how white racial identity is constructed and how systems of white privilege operate in everyday life. White Out brings together the original work of leading scholars across the disciplines of sociology, philosophy, history, and anthropology to give readers an important and cutting-edge study of "whiteness."Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Ashley "Woody" Doane is Associate Dean for Academic Administration and Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Hartford. He is also the past President of the Association for Humanist Sociology. Eduardo Bonilla-Silva is Associate Professor of Sociology at Texas A & M University. He is the past Chair of the Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities of the American Sociological Association. He is also the author of White Supremacy and Racism in thePost-Civil Rights Era, co-winner of the 2002 Oliver Cromwell Cox Award, and Racism Without Racists:Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of RacialInequality in the United States.
Inhaltsangabe
Part 1 PART I Rethinking Whiteness Studies; Chapter 1 Rethinking Whiteness Studies WoodyDoane; Part 2 PART II New Perspectives on Whiteness; Chapter 2 Whitewashing Race: A Critical Perspective on Whiteness Margaret L.Andersen; Chapter 3 White Supremacy as Sociopolitical System: A Philosophical Perspective CharlesW. Mills; Chapter 4 Rethinking Whiteness Historiography: The Case of Italians in Chicago 1890-1945 Thomas A.Guglielmo; Chapter 5 Shades of Whiteness: The Mexican American Experience in Relation to Anglos and Blacks EdwardMurguia TyroneForman; Chapter 6 Rejecting Blackness and Claiming Whiteness: Antiblack Whiteness in the Biracial Project MinkahMakalani; Chapter 7 Who Are These White People?:"Rednecks " "Hillbillies " And "White Trash" As Marked Racial Subjects; Chapter 8 The Beautiful American: Sincere Fictions of the White Messiah in Hollywood Movies HernánVera AndrewM. Gordon; Part 3 PART III Whiteness and Color-Blind Racism: Empirical Studies; Chapter 9 White Fright: Reproducing White Supremacy through Casual Discourse KristenMyers; Chapter 10 Playing the White Ethnic Card: Using Ethnic Identity to Deny Contemporary Racism Charles A.Gallagher; Chapter 11 Some Are More Equal than Others: Lessons on Whiteness from School Amanda E.Lewis; Chapter 12 Good Neighborhoods Good Schools: Race and the "Good Choices" of White Families Heather BethJohnson Thomas M.Shapiro; Chapter 13 White Views of Civil Rights: Color Blindness and Equal Opportunity NancyDitomaso RochelleParks-Yancy CorinnePost; Chapter 14 "Racing for Innocence": Whiteness Corporate Culture and the Backlash against Affirmative Action Jennifer L.Pierce; Chapter 15 Blinded by Whiteness: The Development of White College Students' Racial Awareness Mark A.Chesler MelissaPeet ToddSevig; Part 4 PART IV Whiteness and Antiracism; Chapter 16 Diverse Perspectives on Doing Antiracism: The Younger Generation Karyn D.Mckinney Joe R.Feagin; Chapter 17 The Political Is Personal: The Influence of White Supremacy on White Antiracists'Personal Relationships EileenO'Brien; Part 5 PART V Conclusion; Chapter 18 "New Racism " Color-Blind Racism and the Future of Whiteness in America EduardoBonilla-Silva; Notes; References; Contributors; Index;
Part 1 PART I Rethinking Whiteness Studies; Chapter 1 Rethinking Whiteness Studies WoodyDoane; Part 2 PART II New Perspectives on Whiteness; Chapter 2 Whitewashing Race: A Critical Perspective on Whiteness Margaret L.Andersen; Chapter 3 White Supremacy as Sociopolitical System: A Philosophical Perspective CharlesW. Mills; Chapter 4 Rethinking Whiteness Historiography: The Case of Italians in Chicago 1890-1945 Thomas A.Guglielmo; Chapter 5 Shades of Whiteness: The Mexican American Experience in Relation to Anglos and Blacks EdwardMurguia TyroneForman; Chapter 6 Rejecting Blackness and Claiming Whiteness: Antiblack Whiteness in the Biracial Project MinkahMakalani; Chapter 7 Who Are These White People?:"Rednecks " "Hillbillies " And "White Trash" As Marked Racial Subjects; Chapter 8 The Beautiful American: Sincere Fictions of the White Messiah in Hollywood Movies HernánVera AndrewM. Gordon; Part 3 PART III Whiteness and Color-Blind Racism: Empirical Studies; Chapter 9 White Fright: Reproducing White Supremacy through Casual Discourse KristenMyers; Chapter 10 Playing the White Ethnic Card: Using Ethnic Identity to Deny Contemporary Racism Charles A.Gallagher; Chapter 11 Some Are More Equal than Others: Lessons on Whiteness from School Amanda E.Lewis; Chapter 12 Good Neighborhoods Good Schools: Race and the "Good Choices" of White Families Heather BethJohnson Thomas M.Shapiro; Chapter 13 White Views of Civil Rights: Color Blindness and Equal Opportunity NancyDitomaso RochelleParks-Yancy CorinnePost; Chapter 14 "Racing for Innocence": Whiteness Corporate Culture and the Backlash against Affirmative Action Jennifer L.Pierce; Chapter 15 Blinded by Whiteness: The Development of White College Students' Racial Awareness Mark A.Chesler MelissaPeet ToddSevig; Part 4 PART IV Whiteness and Antiracism; Chapter 16 Diverse Perspectives on Doing Antiracism: The Younger Generation Karyn D.Mckinney Joe R.Feagin; Chapter 17 The Political Is Personal: The Influence of White Supremacy on White Antiracists'Personal Relationships EileenO'Brien; Part 5 PART V Conclusion; Chapter 18 "New Racism " Color-Blind Racism and the Future of Whiteness in America EduardoBonilla-Silva; Notes; References; Contributors; Index;
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