256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

Whiteness Fractured examines the many ways in which whiteness is conceptualized today and how it is understood to operate and to effect social relationships. Exploring the intersections between whiteness, social class, ethnicity and psychosocial phenomena, this book is framed by the question of how whiteness works and what it does. With attention to central concepts and the history of whiteness,... Read more
Part 1 Introduction; Chapter 1 Framing Whiteness; Chapter 2 Theorizing Whiteness; Chapter 3 Interpreting Whiteness and its Correlates; Chapter 4 Histories of Whiteness; Part 2 Four Ways in Which Whiteness Works; Chapter 5 Normalization and Solipsism; Chapter 6 Controlling Terms of Engagement; Chapter 7 Ideological Commitments; Chapter 8 Exclusionary Practices; Part 3 Outward Fractures: Whiteness and intersectionality; Chapter 9 The Rise of Intersectionality Theory; Chapter 10 Intersectionality Theory and the Analysis of Power; Chapter 11 Intersections between Whiteness and Class; Chapter 12 Intersections between Whiteness and Ethnicity; Chapter 13 Intersections between Whiteness and Jewish Ethnicity; Part 4 Inward Fractures: The Psychic Life of Whiteness; Chapter 14 The Emotionality of Whiteness; Chapter 15 The Epistemology of Ignorance; Chapter 16 The Psychic Turn; Chapter 17 Construction of the Other in Popular Racism; Chapter 18 Psychoanalytic Themes in the Construction of the Racialized Other; Part 5 Approaches to Studying Whiteness; Chapter 19 Critical—Relational—Contextual Revisited; Chapter 20 Whiteness in Popular Culture; Chapter 21 The Paradox of Action;

Biography

Cynthia Levine-Rasky is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at Queen’s University, Canada. She is editor of Working through Whiteness: International Perspectives and co-author of Teaching for Equity and Diversity: Research to Practice.

"Whiteness Fractured provides a provocative synthesis of the field, all the while offering the author’s own perspective on where the field should continue to grow and develop...Whiteness Fractured is an excellent and thought-provoking read, and one that attests to the continued importance of critically engaging with whiteness as a “locus of power.”"
Emily Skidmore, Texas Tech University, Journal of American Ethnic History