Whiteness studies
Information about Whiteness studies
Whiteness studies (also known as "critical whiteness studies") is a controversial arena of academic inquiry focused on the cultural, historical and sociological aspects of people identified as white, and the social construction of whiteness as a social status. It emerged as a field of study within the academy, primarily in the United States and the UK, as early as 1983 (see the works of Marilyn Frye). However, W.E.B. Du Bois mentions the "public and psychological" privileges of "white" workers in his 1935 work Black Reconstruction. As of 2004, according to The Washington Post, at least 30 institutions in the United States including Princeton University, the University of California at Los Angeles, the University of New Mexico and University of Massachusetts Amherst offer, or have offered, courses in whiteness studies. Teaching and research around whiteness often overlap with research on post-colonial theory and orientalism taking place in the Arts and Humanities, Sociology, Literature, Communications, Cultural and Media and Studies faculties and departments, amongst others (e.g. Kent, Leeds). Also heavily engaged in whiteness studies are practitioners of anti-racist education, such as Betita Martinez and the Challenging White Supremacy workshop.
The central tenet of whiteness studies is a reading of history and its effects on the present, inspired by postmodernism and social constructionism, in which the very concept of race is said to have been constructed by a white power structure in order to justify discrimination against nonwhites. Since the 1800s, critics of the concept of race have questioned if human races even exist and pointed out that arbitrary amounts of categories are chosen, and that the idea of race is not about important differences within the human species.
Major areas of research include the nature of white identity and of white privilege, the historical process by which a white racial identity was created, the relation of culture to white identity, and possible processes of social change as they affect white identity. Many scientists have demonstrated that racial theories are based upon an arbitrary amount of categories and customs, and can overlook the problem of gradations between categories. and such presumptions also inform work within the field of whiteness studies.
Macquarie University academic Joseph Pugliese [2] is among writers who have applied whiteness studies to an Australian context, discussing the ways that Indigenous Australians were marginalized in the wake of European colonization of Australia, as whiteness came to be defined as central to Australian identity. Pugliese discusses the 20th century White Australia policy as a conscious attempt to preserve the "purity" of whiteness in Australian society.
Writers such as Peggy McIntosh have sought to enumerate the social, political and cultural advantages accorded to whites in American society. They argue that these advantages seem invisible to most whites, but obvious to others. They often call for whites to acknowledge, renounce or betray these privileges by using them against racism.
In Race Traitor, the editors cite as the basis for their proposed actions a call by African American writers and activists--notably W.E.B. Du Bois and James Baldwin--for whites to break solidarity with American racism. Since that racism involves the awarding of various forms of white privilege, some have even argued that every white identity is drawn into that system of privilege. Only identities which seek to transcend or defy that privilege, they argue, are effectively anti-racist. This essential argument echoes Baldwin's declaration that, "As long as you think you are white, there's no hope for you," in an essay in which he acknowledges a variety of European cultures, a multiracial American culture, but no white culture per se which can be distinguished from the maintenance of racism.
Race Traitor advocates have sought examples of race treason by whites in American history. One historical figure consistently valorized by Race Traitor (a publication favorable to the tenets of whiteness studies) is John Brown, a Northern abolitionist of European descent who battled slavery in western territories of the United States and led a failed but dramatic raid to free slaves and create an armed anti-slavery force at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.
Visions of praxis cited by Race Traitor writers range from anti-racist unionism (such as DRUM in Detroit), collaboration in urban uprisings, and documenting and interfering with police abuse of people of color. Joel Olson has written about a theoretical vision in his book The Abolition of White Democracy.
Conservative writer and activist David Horowitz draws a distinction between whiteness studies and other disciplines. "Black studies celebrates blackness, Chicano studies celebrates Chicanos, women's studies celebrates women, and white studies attacks white people as evil."[4]
The September 22, 2005 front page of
The Washington Post
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner Washington Post Company
Editor Leonard Downie, Jr.
Founded 1877
Headquarters 1150 15th Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C.
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The central tenet of whiteness studies is a reading of history and its effects on the present, inspired by postmodernism and social constructionism, in which the very concept of race is said to have been constructed by a white power structure in order to justify discrimination against nonwhites. Since the 1800s, critics of the concept of race have questioned if human races even exist and pointed out that arbitrary amounts of categories are chosen, and that the idea of race is not about important differences within the human species.
Major areas of research include the nature of white identity and of white privilege, the historical process by which a white racial identity was created, the relation of culture to white identity, and possible processes of social change as they affect white identity. Many scientists have demonstrated that racial theories are based upon an arbitrary amount of categories and customs, and can overlook the problem of gradations between categories. and such presumptions also inform work within the field of whiteness studies.
History of whiteness
Whiteness studies draws on research over the last forty years into the definition of race, almost entirely within the American context (though see Bonnett, A. 2000 White Identities). This research emphasizes the social construction of white, Native, and black identities in interaction with the institutions of slavery, colonial settlement, citizenship, and industrial labor. Scholars such as Winthrop Jordan [1] have traced the evolution of the legally defined line between "blacks" and "whites" to colonial government efforts to prevent cross-racial revolts among unpaid laborers.Macquarie University academic Joseph Pugliese [2] is among writers who have applied whiteness studies to an Australian context, discussing the ways that Indigenous Australians were marginalized in the wake of European colonization of Australia, as whiteness came to be defined as central to Australian identity. Pugliese discusses the 20th century White Australia policy as a conscious attempt to preserve the "purity" of whiteness in Australian society.
White privilege
Writers such as Peggy McIntosh have sought to enumerate the social, political and cultural advantages accorded to whites in American society. They argue that these advantages seem invisible to most whites, but obvious to others. They often call for whites to acknowledge, renounce or betray these privileges by using them against racism.
Schools of thought
Critical White Studies
Coming out of the legal studies field of Critical Race Theory, theorists of Critical Whiteness Studies seek to examine the construction and moral implications of whiteness. The field inherits from Critical Race Theory a focus on the legal and historical construction of white identity, the use of narratives (whether legal discourse, testimony or fiction) as a tool for exposing systems of racial power.[3]Race Traitor
One group of people involved in these discussions advocates a strategy they call race treason, and are grouped around articles appearing in the journal Race Traitor. The adherents' main argument is that whiteness (as a marker of a social status within the United States) is conferred upon people in exchange for an expectation of loyalty to what they consider an oppressive social order. This loyalty has taken a variety of forms over time: suppression of slave rebellions, participation in patrols for runaways, maintenance of race exclusionary unions, participation in riots, support for racist violence, and participation in acts of violence during the conquest of western North America. Like currency, the value of this privilege (for the powerful) depends on the reliability of "white skin" (or as physical anthropologists would deem this construct, the phenotype of historical North Atlantic Europeans) as a marker for social consent. With sufficient "counterfeit whites" resisting racism and capitalism, the writers in this tradition argue, the privilege will be withdrawn or will splinter, prompting an era of conflict and social redefinition. Without such a period, they argue, progress towards social justice is impossible, and thus "treason to whiteness is loyalty to humanity."In Race Traitor, the editors cite as the basis for their proposed actions a call by African American writers and activists--notably W.E.B. Du Bois and James Baldwin--for whites to break solidarity with American racism. Since that racism involves the awarding of various forms of white privilege, some have even argued that every white identity is drawn into that system of privilege. Only identities which seek to transcend or defy that privilege, they argue, are effectively anti-racist. This essential argument echoes Baldwin's declaration that, "As long as you think you are white, there's no hope for you," in an essay in which he acknowledges a variety of European cultures, a multiracial American culture, but no white culture per se which can be distinguished from the maintenance of racism.
Race Traitor advocates have sought examples of race treason by whites in American history. One historical figure consistently valorized by Race Traitor (a publication favorable to the tenets of whiteness studies) is John Brown, a Northern abolitionist of European descent who battled slavery in western territories of the United States and led a failed but dramatic raid to free slaves and create an armed anti-slavery force at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.
Visions of praxis cited by Race Traitor writers range from anti-racist unionism (such as DRUM in Detroit), collaboration in urban uprisings, and documenting and interfering with police abuse of people of color. Joel Olson has written about a theoretical vision in his book The Abolition of White Democracy.
Criticisms
Some have claimed that whiteness studies is an example of the pervasiveness of reverse discrimination in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.Conservative writer and activist David Horowitz draws a distinction between whiteness studies and other disciplines. "Black studies celebrates blackness, Chicano studies celebrates Chicanos, women's studies celebrates women, and white studies attacks white people as evil."[4]
Whiteness and feminism
The study of whiteness was taken up by white feminist theorists responding to black feminisms' demands that 'White Women Listen!' (Hazel Carby, 1997) and the critique of the feminist 'sisterhood' as eliding social, cultural and racial differences. This was the subject of an interdisciplinary conference held at York University, in 1998, the proceedings of which were later published in White?Women by Raw Nerve Books [1].References
1. ^ Jordan, Winthrop. 'White Over Black'
2. ^ Dr Joseph Pugliese's page at Macquarie University
3. ^ See, for example, Haney López, Ian F. White by Law. 1995; Lipsitz, George. Possessive Investment in Whiteness; Delgado, Richard; Williams, Patricial; and Kovel, Joel.
4. ^ Darryl Fears, "Hue and Cry on 'Whiteness Studies'", The Washington Post, June 20, 2003.
2. ^ Dr Joseph Pugliese's page at Macquarie University
3. ^ See, for example, Haney López, Ian F. White by Law. 1995; Lipsitz, George. Possessive Investment in Whiteness; Delgado, Richard; Williams, Patricial; and Kovel, Joel.
4. ^ Darryl Fears, "Hue and Cry on 'Whiteness Studies'", The Washington Post, June 20, 2003.
Further reading
- Eric Arnesen (2001), "Whiteness and the Historian's Imagination," International Labor and Working-Class History 60: 3-32
- Allen, Theodore W. (1994), The Invention of the White Race: Volume One; Racial Oppression and Social Control, New York and London, Verso.
- Berger, Maurice (1999), "White Lies: Race and the Myths of Whiteness", New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux
- Bonnett, Alastair (2000) White Identities: Historical and International Perspectives Harlow, Prentice Hall
- Carby, Hazel (1997), 'White Women Listen! Black Feminism and the Boundaries of Sisterhood', in Heidi Safia Mirza (ed.), Black British Feminism: A Reader, London and New York, Routledge.
- Connor, Rachel and Crofts, Charlotte (1998), 'Assuming White Identities: Racial and Gendered Looking Across the Literature / Media Divide', in Heloise Brown, Madi Gilkes, Ann Kaloski-Naylor (eds), White?Women, York: Raw Nerve Books.
- Davy, Kate (1997), 'Outing Whiteness: A Feminist Lesbian Project', in Mike Hill (ed.), Whiteness: A Critical Reader, New York and London, New York University Press.
- Hage, G (2003) White Nation: fantasies of White supremacy in a multicultural society, Annandale, NSW: Pluto Press
- Hill, Mike. (2004) After Whiteness: Unmaking an American Majority. New York: NYU Press.
- Hill, Mike. (1997) Whiteness: A Critical Reader. New York: NYU Press.
- Peter Kolchin, "Whiteness Studies: The New History of Race in America," Journal of American History 89 (2002) 154-73.
- Donaldson, Laura E. (1992), Decolonizing Feminisms: Race, Gender and Empire, London, Routledge.
- Dyer, Richard (1997), White, London, Routledge.
- Gaines, Jane (1986), 'White Privilege and Looking Relations: Race and Gender in Feminist Film Theory', Cultural Critique, 4, 59-79.
- Kaplan, E. Ann (1997), Looking For the Other: Feminism, Film and the Imperial Gaze, New York and London, Routledge.
- Lott, Eric (1997), 'The Whiteness of Film Noir', in Mike Hill (ed.), Whiteness: A Critical Reader (1997), New York and London, New York University Press, 81-101
- Nishikawa, Kinohi (2005), "White," The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Literature, ed. Hans Ostrom and J. David Macey, Jr. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1725-26.
- Roediger, David R. (1991), The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class, New York and London, Verso.
- Shohat, Ella (1991), 'Gender and the Culture of Empire: Towards a Feminist Ethnography of the Cinema', Quarterly Review of Film and Video, 13 (1-2): 45-84.
- Young, Robert. (1990) White Mythologies: Writing History and the West. London: Routledge.
See also
- Casta
- Anti-racist mathematics
- Anti-racism
- Identity politics
- Ideological whiteness
- Media and ethnicity
- Postmodernism
- Race, for a discussion of the biological concept of race and its applicability to the human population
- Social criticism
- White (people)
- White privilege
- White trash
External links
- Whiteness Studies: Deconstructing (the) Race, web site
- Abolish the White Race, Harvard Magazine
- Hue and Cry on "Whiteness Studies", Washington Post article
- Roediger, David R. The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class (ISBN 0-86091-550-6) (Verso, 1991)
- Engles, Tim (editor) Towards a Bibliography of Critical Whiteness Studies Center on Democracy in a Multiracial Society, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
White People
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White People is the second album by Handsome Boy Modeling School.
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White People is the second album by Handsome Boy Modeling School.
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Marilyn Frye (born 1941) is a philosophy professor and feminist theorist. She earned her Ph.D. at Cornell University in 1969 and has taught feminist philosophy, metaphysics, and philosophy of language at Michigan State University since 1974.
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W. E. B. Du Bois
W. E. B. Du Bois, in 1918
Born: January 23 1868
Great Barrington, Massachusetts, USA
Died: July 27 1963 (aged 95)
Accra, Ghana
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W. E. B. Du Bois, in 1918
Born: January 23 1868
Great Barrington, Massachusetts, USA
Died: July 27 1963 (aged 95)
Accra, Ghana
Occupation: Academic, Scholar, Activist
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Black Reconstruction in America is a book by W.E.B. Du Bois, first published in 1935. It is revisionist approach to looking at the reconstruction of the south after its defeat in the American civil war.
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The September 22, 2005 front page of
The Washington Post
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner Washington Post Company
Editor Leonard Downie, Jr.
Founded 1877
Headquarters 1150 15th Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C.
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University of Massachusetts Amherst (otherwise known as UMass Amherst or UMass) is a research and land-grant university in Amherst, USA. The University of Massachusetts Amherst offers over 90 undergraduate and 65 graduate areas of study.
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Orientalism is the study of Near and Far Eastern societies and cultures, languages, and peoples by Western scholars. It can also refer to the imitation or depiction of aspects of Eastern cultures in the West by writers, designers and artists.
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The Challenging White Supremacy (CWS) workshop is a San Francisco Bay Area-based collective and a curriculum for anti-racist education founded by Sharon Martinas and Mickey Ellinger in 1993.
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Postmodernism is a term applied to a wide-ranging set of developments in critical theory, philosophy, architecture, art, literature, and culture, which are generally characterized as either emerging from, in reaction to, or superseding, modernism.
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Social constructionism or social constructivism is a sociological theory of knowledge that considers how social phenomena develop in particular social contexts...... Click the link for more information.
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RACE can refer to:
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- Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends, a molecular biology technique
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A social construction or social construct is any institutionalized entity or artifact in a social system "invented" or "constructed" by participants in a particular culture or society that exists because people agree to behave as if it exists or follow certain conventional
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Winthrop Donaldson Jordan (November 11, 1931 – February 23, 2007) was an American history professor and renowned writer of American Civil War and racial history of the United States.
Jordan was born in Worcester, Massachusetts.
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Jordan was born in Worcester, Massachusetts.
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Macquarie University is an Australian university located in Sydney. It is ranked 7th in Australia and 82nd in the world by the UK's 2006 Times Higher Education Supplement.
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Indigenous Australians are descendants of the first known human inhabitants of the Australian continent and its nearby islands. The term includes both the Torres Strait Islanders and the Aboriginal People, who together make up about 2.5% of Australia's population.
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White Australia policy is a generic term used to describe a collection of historical legislation and policies, intended to restrict non-white immigration to Australia, and to promote European immigration, from 1901 to 1973.
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White privilege has the following meanings:
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- White privilege (sociology) -- social privileges argued to be enjoyed by whites.
- White privilege (royalty) -- better known as "privilège du blanc", a clothing protocol in the Vatican.
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Peggy McIntosh is an American feminist and anti-racist activist, a speaker and the founder and co-director of the National S.E.E.D. Project on Inclusive Curriculum (Seeking Educational Equity and Diversity)[1].
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Critical race theory is a school of sociological thought and legal studies that emphasizes the socially constructed nature of race, considers judicial conclusions to be the result of the workings of power, and opposes the continuation of racial subordination.
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